Biblical Illustrator Paul and Timotheus, the servants of Christ Jesus, to all the saints in Christ Jesus which are at Philippi 1. Servants of Jesus Christ is the most royal title which human beings can assume.2. Saints take precedence of bishops and deacons forasmuch as character is immortal, while office is but temporary. 3. All blessing is with the absolute; even the chief of the apostles can only bless ministerially, not primarily. I. THE POWER OF MEMORY. Remembrance is a very heaven or hell. Memory follows man like his own shadow. A man of gladsome recollections can never be absolutely alone. Whenever the apostle took an excursion across the mountains and through the valleys of his gone lifetime he caught sight of the loving Philippians, and their very names gladdened him — as a long-absent traveller might be gladdened by the pinnacles of the city of his home. II. MAN SERVES GOD BY AIDING GOD'S SERVANTS. Paul thanked God for the blessing of kind, helpful men. III. THE MORE ENLARGED AND SUSCEPTIBLE THE HEART, THE MORE EASILY CAN SERVICE BE RENDERED TO IT. It is easier to win the benediction of a great and noble heart than of a withered and sapless bone. Look at Elisha and the woman of Shunem; see Christ blessing the woman for her one box of nard; and Paul prostrating himself before God at the little kindnesses of the Philippians. IV. HOW GOOD A THING IT IS TO SERVE THE GREAT, AND INFERENTIALLY, HOW SUBLIME A THING TO LIVE AND DIE IN THE SERVICE OF THE GREATEST. If Paul remembered these benefactions, he has also left this testimony: "God is not unrighteous to forget your work of faith and labour of love." In both cases it is a question of memory. Nor will God forget the man who never does a good deed. V. EACH OF US SHOULD LEAVE A MEMORY THAT SHALL BE CHERISHED AND BLESSED. A noble life is not necessarily made up of great efforts, but of little acts of consideration, well-timed smiles of encouragement, gentle words and generous interpretations. Not one of us, how hidden and feeble soever, need live a sterile life. VI. EVERY MAN MUST DETERMINE FOR HIMSELF THE MEMORY HE LEAVES BEHIND HIM; whether he will so live that "every remembrance" of him shall induce thankfulness to God, or his name be a burden which memory would willingly cast off. VII. PAUL STANDS FORTH AS AN ILLUSTRIOUS MAN WHILE THE PHILIPPIANS ARE NOT KNOWN TO US BY MORE THAN THEIR GENERAL NAME. The hidden workers are not on that account to deem themselves useless. Where would the oak be but for invisible agents? (J. Parker, D. D.) I. WHAT WE OUGHT TO BE. Servants of Jesus Christ; saints; useful in His Church. II. WHAT WE NEED. Grace; peace. III. WHENCE THESE BLESSINGS FLOW. From God: from Jesus Christ. (J. Lyth, D. D.) I. II. III. IV. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
1. Paul had full confidence in the love and obedience of the Philippians. Hence, as in Thessalonians, he drops the official title, because he knew that no such assertion of his claim to be heard and obeyed was needed. 2. He introduces the name of Timothy as his dear friend, well known to the Philippians. This was natural, but was only a courtesy. The letter is Paul's alone, and carries with it full apostolic authority. When Timothy is referred to again it is in the third person (chap. Philippians 2:10). 3. The designation, "servants," etc., is a beautiful one. James, the Lord's brother, similarly begins his letter. It describes all who, by taking Christ as their Master, have entered into true freedom. II. THE CHURCH. 1. Saints.(1) This is a most instructive paraphrase for "Church." The radical thought is consecration. Believers are by their Saviour's grace separated from the world to serve God. Our secular life Christ would have us make holy. We are apt to think of a Christian as one who accepts certain doctrines and performs certain services. The only satisfying proof that the gospel has been believed is holiness of character.(2) The secret of true saintliness — "in Christ Jesus." Out of Christ none are saints. Believers, because they are "in Him," have within them the pulsations and working of His life.(3) All the saints are addressed to show the warmth of the apostle's affection, his impartiality, and his desire that all should love one another. 2. Bishops and deacons. These are mentioned probably because —(1) Paul wished to acknowledge their liberality through Epaphroditus; or —(2) To support their authority, which may have been impugned; or —(3) In reply to a letter subscribed by them, as in Acts 15:22-23. III. THE PRAYER. The highest form of Christian life is seen when energetic love is fully pervaded by a spirit of gentleness and sympathy, exhibiting itself in true politeness to all of all social positions, and in little things as well as great. Paul's letters, written in the midst of arduous work, yet show diligent attention to all the kindly courtesies of social life. 1. From "grace," the free favour of God, come all our blessings. Its reference here is to the manifestation of the Divine favour in the enlightening and sanctifying influences of the Holy Ghost. Grace to transform the naturally sinful into the likeness of the sinless Jesus is what is asked of God. 2. The meet companion of grace is peace, springing from the knowledge of God's love in Christ. An Eastern, when he enters a house, says, "Peace be to this house," as thoughtlessly as we say, "Good morning"; but the courtesies of Christians should have reality of significance. 3. The prayer is presented to God our Father, "from whom cometh every good gift," and the Lord Jesus Christ who humbled Himself that, in a way consistent with the glory of the Divine character, "grace and peace" might be bestowed on man. (R. Johnstone, LL. B.)
1. He omits his apostolical authority. The term apostle is not added here nor in Thessalonians and Philemon. His dignity as their father in Christ was supreme and incontestable. The man rather than the apostle speaks in every sentence. The spirit of his apostolical prerogative is felt all the more because of the absence of its letter. 2. He unites his own name with that of Timothy, whose name appears with his for a fourth time, because —(1) Timothy had twice visited the Philippians (Acts 16; Acts 19), and was doubtless endeared to them.(2) Paul desired to invest him with as much dignity as possible.(3) He was probably St. Paul's amanuensis, and —(4) perhaps he was so dear to his father in the gospel. 3. The bond between them was the common service of Christ Jesus. The apostolic name would not have been common. It was specific and unshared. "Servants" in a sense belongs to all who belong to Christ. But here the term has relation to Christ as Lord, who assigns to all and to each their sphere of duty. II. THE CHURCH OF THE PHILIPPIANS. 1. Its essential spiritual character. "All the saints," etc., is the most profound and sacred definition of the true Church which the New Testament contains.(1) "All" suggests the whole company of those who form the body of which Christ is the Head, the bond of union being the Holy Ghost common to both. As a spiritual Church on earth it is the communion of those who (Colossians 1:2) are "faithful" as believers in Jesus, "saints" as set apart from the world, and "brethren" as united in the brotherhood of salvation.(2) "Saints in Christ Jesus" indicates —(a) That they are consecrated to God in Christ Jesus; redeemed from the curse of the law; no longer condemned with the world but accepted in the beloved. Hence they realize the ideal relation, a holy nation and a peculiar people.(b) That they are not with Him, following Him only, but "in Christ," in whom are all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, the Holy Ghost and all His influences; full redemption and all its powers of life and sanctity. But all things in Him are ours.(c) All this being true we are furnished with a safeguard against a double error, There is a tendency to regard this word as synonymous with Christian people; but we must not suffer it to become merely a conventional official term. On the other hand there are those who make it disparage the visible Church. But here "saints" mean those who are baptized into the visible community, and signifies not only that they are truly members of Christ, but that they profess to belong to Him.(3) Each individual. The glorious prerogative of the mystical fellowship of the body must be a personal possession. 2. Its outward organic form.(1) This is the earliest reference of St. Paul to ecclesiastical order. It marks out a city as containing one visible body, not necessarily always meeting in one place, but under one united government.(2) The apostle greets the Church with the bishops and deacons as one. They are all on the same level in relation to the Divine benediction. It is a debasement of Christian language which makes the ministerial order the Church.(3) The spiritual and visible organization must ever be found in one. Neither the one nor the other without its counterpart is perfect "in the Lord." III. THE GREETING. 1. As an apostolic salutation it is peculiar to St. Paul. It is pronounced in the name of God. It is not even in inspired man to bless his fellow. All benediction comes from God as all doxology goes back to Him. 2. But it is also an invocation of grace and peace upon the Christian Church.(1) The eternal love of God as it sends the Redeemer for man's salvation is grace. The fruit of this flowing through Christ is peace.(2) The invocation should be our petition. All the people who receive the benediction and hear the prayer must say Amen. (W. B. Pope, D. D.)
I. AGE AND YOUTH TOGETHER. Not separate, looking askance at each other, divided by incompatibilities or jealousies, but in union. The young often flee from the old; the old are often impatient with the young. The advantages of this union are obvious. 1. The old will contribute the wisdom of experience. 2. The young will quicken animation and hope. II. Though age and youth are together AGE TAKES PRECEDENCE OF YOUTH. Paul first. A principle of right settles all questions of priority. It is not beautiful because not right that youth should take precedence. There are many ways of taking virtual precedence. 1. Contradiction. 2. Impatience. 3. Neglect. III. Though age takes precedence of youth yet BOTH ARE ENGAGED IN COMMON SERVICE. "Servants," not Paul the master. See how one great relationship determines all minor conditions and attitudes. As between themselves Paul was father, renowned, senior; Timothy was son, obscure, junior; but as before Christ, the one Lord, they were both servants. The Alps are great mountains in themselves, but are less than pimples in relation to the world. The earth, a great globe in itself, is a speck of light to the nearest star. The important tradesman in a small town is lost in a great city. The right way to take our proper measure and to chasten our ambition is to look at the highest relationships of all. The great man dwindles into his proper proportions when he looks at the Creator; the mighty potentate as he looks at the King of kings; the philanthropist as he looks at the Saviour. The noisy rushing train seems to be going fast; let it look at the flying stars and be humble. (J. Parker, D. D.)
1. To secure the widest diffusion of the gospel, great centres should be the first places chosen for the concentration of its forces. 2. The gospel of universal adaptation has a worldwide mission (Romans 1:15, 16). The three first converts embraced different nationalities, employments, social grades. They were Lydia, the Oriental trader; the Grecian female slave and soothsayer; the Roman "keeper of the prison." "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free; there is neither male nor female, for ye are all one in Christ Jesus." Christ has demolished all barriers to the exercise of Divine mercy. 3. The duty and privilege of Christian parents to consecrate their children and home to Christ (Acts 16:15, 33, 34, 40). 4. Civic distinctions, subordinated to Christ, will further the gospel and adorn the Christian name. Paul's Roman citizenship gained his freedom and silenced his enemies. 5. His chain connects the history of Rome and Philippi. 6. The Christian's spirit can defy "the inner prison" to suppress its praise or prayer (Acts 16:25). (G. C. Ballard.)
(Professor Eadie.)
(Dean Vaughan.)
(J. Hutchison, D. D.)
(Archbishop Trench.)
(F. W. Robertson.)
(Toplady.)
(J. Edwards.)
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
1. Its subject — "fellowship of the gospel."(1) Their mutual delight in all that the gospel brings. The grace that saved the apostle was that which saved his converts. Having a common faith they had a bond of union.(2) Their cooperation in all attempts for the furtherance of the gospel. 2. The emotions it awakened.(1) A grateful recognition of its unbroken character. Never had a single jar arisen between them. This experience was exceptional with Paul as it is with ourselves. In looking over ten years of work we can see more than enough to prevent our review from being one of unmixed pleasure. This is essential to check pride.(2) Thankfulness to God, the source and sustainer of it. This also is exceptional. We thank God for good and earnest men, but can they thank God for our cooperation? II. THE FORECAST. It is founded on the same cooperation. 1. The apostle's confident hope in regard to their future. Confidence in character is of tardy growth, and is often disappointed. Paul's was based on two grounds.(1) Their character had not failed when it was severely tested. They had braved the ridicule and persecution of their heathen neighbours for ten years.(2) God, being who and what He is, would not fail. He would bring the work He had begun to completion; not, however, that men are passive instruments in His hands. 2. The staple of His prayer. It is a prayer for the growth of that which already exists in them; and one which implies their active cooperation in fulfilling the subject of His petitions; that their love may grow in knowledge and perception. 3. The remaining portion of the forecast refers to the fruits of which love, knowledge, and a powerful moral sense are the roots.(1) There is a quick choice of the best among good things (ver. 10). Not mental and spiritual epicurianism.(2) Frankness and transparency, and therefore purity.(3) Blamelessness, not causing offence to men; so living as to be acceptable to God.(4) Abundant and uninterrupted fruitfulness. (J. J. Goadby.)
I. AN EXPRESSION OF GRATITUDE FOR THE PAST HISTORY OF THE PHILIPPIAN CHURCH (vers. 3-5). 1. Its object — "My God." The "my" well illustrates the broadening influence of Christianity; its tendency to slay the selfishness of the human heart. The wise believer knows that the widening of the range of blessing brings no diminution of individual blessing. 2. Its occasion. He had vividly before him "the kindness of their youth, the love of their espousals" to the Saviour. With this good beginning he knew that their history since had on the whole accorded. How rare in any age such a Church! How sweet to a pastor such a memory. 3. Its form.(1) When a minister sees God's blessing plainly resting on his work, his sense of gratitude impels him with peculiar power to prayer. This is the proper and healthful influence of gratitude to God for any gift.(2) Prayer offered with thankfulness will be distinguished by gladness. 4. Its ground. Every true Church is an association for advancing the gospel.(1) This fellowship was first and fundamentally with Christ.(2) In Him they had "fellowship in relation to the gospel" with each other. The advancement of each other's piety and peace and the extension of the gospel was an object of definite pursuit.(3) This fellowship was with all Christians — with their friend Paul for example. II. THE EXPRESSION OF GRATITUDE FOR AN ASSURED HOPE IN REGARD TO THE FUTURE. 1. Every work of God is good, particularly His work of saving grace, which makes sinful men "good." Paul believed that the same grace would bring the good work to completeness. God does not do things by halves. 2. Having this happy conviction Paul is confident that the good would be carried on "until the day of Jesus Christ" — the day of the resurrection when body as well as soul will be glorified. 3. But diligence, watchfulness, and prayer, is necessary "to make our calling and election sure." The perseverance of the saints is a perseverance in faith and holiness. (R. Johnstone, LL. B.)
II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. (J. Lyth, D. D.)Here are — I. PLEASANT MEMORIES. Inspiring gratitude, joy, prayer. II. CONFIDENT HOPES. The work is begun; must be continued; completed. III. LOVING FELLOWSHIP. In bonds; in the defence of the gospel; in the enjoyment of special grace. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
1. Look at the general religious aspect of the subject. The history of the Church is full of imperishable monuments of life and character. This history has created an enthusiasm which has resulted in acts of the highest importance and use. Same histories debase, this elevates; some depress, this strengthens. 2. Look at the particular religious history of this subject. The history of this Church was interwoven with the apostle's liveliest interest. He was the founder of it, and it developed virtues which excited his warmest admiration. So there are tender recollections of the work of grace clustering around every particular Church. If we, at any time, are cold or despondent, let us open the chronicles of the Churches of our early days, gather around us the warm hearts which cheered us then, and though dead they will speak to us words of life and encouragement. II. THE PRAYERS. We call prayer "the burden of a sigh, the falling of a tear." There is that in our life which lends sorrow to prayer. Much of this, however, is wrong — lamentation over pardoned sins, etc. We are under an obligation to approach the throne of grace with joy. 1. We may look at this in its general aspect. It arose from an absence of selfish desires, and absorption in the condition and want of others. Paul's heart was bound up with the interests of the Church. At Philippi there was everything to evoke spiritual joy. Paul, therefore, joyfully prayed for a larger blessing. Let us approach God with praise for the prosperity of the Church, and with prayer for its increase. 2. If we narrow our field of observation every Christian must feel thankful for his new heart. If the glory of creation, the goodness of providence, excites gratitude, much more this the chiefest of God's works. Let us supplicate its further perfection. (Weekly Pulpit.)
II. III. IV. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
1. That are prompted by the Spirit of God. 2. That recall the past joy of harvest. 3. That cause to abide With us, fruit long since reaped. 4. That link us still in association with distant but kindred spirits. 5. That evoke perennial gratitude to God. 6. That enrich our own moral worth.They "shall be had in everlasting remembrance," whose life on earth gives birth to memories such as these. (G. G. Ballard.)
I. THE SORROW OF HIS IMPRISONMENT IS TEMPERED BY HIS THOUGHT OF GOD. 1. He recognizes God as his God. He knows that God has led him and redeemed him, and that nothing can separate him from His love (Psalm 23.; 63:2). As it was with Paul and David, so it may be with us. "Whom have I in heaven but Thee." II. THE SORROW OF HIS SEPARATION FROM THE PHILIPPIANS IS LIGHTENED BY THOUGHT OF THEIR WELFARE. 1. He remembered them in his thanksgivings.(1) For their fellowship with each other in the gospel.(2) He had confidence in its continuance. 2. He remembered them in his supplications.(1) That their mutual affection, knowledge of truth, and spiritual perceptions might increase.(2) That they might be preserved pure and without offence to the day of Christ.(3) That they might be filled with the fruits of righteousness. Conclusion: Looking to God he felt thankful; thinking on what God had wrought by him, and praying for its perfection, he was happy. Here is the secret of ministerial joy. (Family Churchman.)
1. Being. 2. Love. 3. Sympathy. 4. Effort.Blessed consummation of life when myself, as the court of final appeal, gives place to "my God." Then "He calls a worm His friend, He calls Himself my God." II. THE GROUND OF THIS RELATIONSHIP. 1. He is my Master, my Provider, my Redeemer, my Father, my Friend. "Whose I am and whom I serve." 2. Faith gathers up these long-forgotten links, and welds them into a golden chain, whereby the heart is consciously rebound to God. Appropriating faith commands the fulness of God's heart and the omnipotence of His hand. III. ITS EFFECT. Deeper than any mere channel of its communication, true gratitude has its spring in the immediate and responsive fellowship existing between the soul and God. (G. G. Ballard.)
(J. Daille.)
II. III. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
II. III. IV. (G. C. Ballard.)
II. III. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
II. III. (G. G. Ballard.)
1. The bond of union — Christ. The attraction was irresistible to all who had come near enough to feel the force of the magnet of Divine love. This power directed all faculties, possessions, desires, in the same course. As He had not lived for Himself neither did they. The result was brotherly union. As all the rivers flow to find one common rest in the sea, so their melted hearts ran into the one fellowship — the Church. Here they found protection from the chill of the world and the storm of persecution. Weak faith was strengthened; the timid heart emboldened; unity begat strength and numbers, and augmented influence. The communal life brought together a vast capital to be invested in the cause which was so dear to their own heart. 2. Concerted action. The Christian communities existed as much, if not more, for external labour as for internal edification. As no Christian lived to himself, the whole Church could not possibly confine its wealth of power and influence within its Own circle. They lived one for another that all might live for the salvation of the world. The idea generally attached to a community is that it exists exclusively for the benefit of its own order, but the Christian society is built on the principle of give in order to receive. The Christians at Philippi met for prayer and for general improvement, in order to give the light of the knowledge of God in Christ Jesus to the world. 3. The transmission of moral influence is only possible through sympathetic media. The best cable chain would not convey an electric message any distance, but a small copper wire would do so round the globe. Divine truth must proceed from the heart of the Church, and be anointed with the unction of pure motives and tender sympathies, to accomplish its mission among men. The experimental expression of the truth is the most powerful and successful. II. PERSEVERANCE — "from the first day until now." The converts had not relapsed into idolatry, nor were any idolatrous practices incorporated in their worship. They had resisted all worldly influences. The converts held on their way, progressing in knowledge and the Christian graces. When the apostle looked towards this Church, he saw signs of growth and increased vigour. 1. True Christian fellowship absorbs the whole man, thought, desire, association, and progression. It is the family of God, with ample room for the development of human nature. Of all fruitfulness, true manhood is the greatest. The consummation of fellowship is found in the man Christ Jesus. 2. Christian fellowship absorbs all time and service. From the first day to the last, and from the last day on through eternity its bonds are unrelaxed. It is not a temporary engagement, but an everlasting covenant. Some of its forms must undergo changes, but its essence is the same, even fellowship with the Father and the Son, and communion with the saints. (Weekly Pulpit.)
II. III. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
2. Hearts which beat for it. 3. Lips which testify for it. 4. Hands which work for it. 5. Gifts which extend it. (G. G. Ballard.)
(J. Hutchinson, D. D.)
1. The signs are not to be sought in any set methods or patterns by which God is supposed to begin His work of training the soul for Himself. His ways are endless. Some souls have to be smitten: for others a gentle look is enough, e.g., Saul and Zacchaeus. 2. There are certain impressions and effects produced by the preaching of the gospel or by the ways of God in His providence which are sometimes mistaken for signs of a gracious work. The consequences of sin may fill the conscience with remorse, and vows made to begin a new life. A sense of happiness springs up in emotional natures on a very superficial acquaintance with religion and its responsibilities. Nor is the sign found in a head well informed. 3. What then is the sign? Love to God, Christ, man, showing itself in trust and obedience, and goodness. II. THE CONDITIONS UNDER WHICH THIS GOOD WORK WILL BE PERFECTED BY GOD. 1. Remember that so long as you are in this world the work is incomplete. For the development of a soul in Christ's likeness time is necessary. "First the blade," etc. Some are discouraged because they cannot see the full corn at once. If it is time for the full corn, however, do not be satisfied with the ear or blade. It is the indolent man who thinks he has only to believe once for all. 2. You must concur in God's work as it advances from stage to stage till it is completed in the day of Jesus Christ. Growth proceeds slowly if it is to endure. Mushrooms spring up in the night but they soon decay. (R. Tuck, B. A.)
II. GROUNDED SOLELY IN CHRIST. 1. As his medium of access to the mind, the heart, the power of God (Ephesians 3:12). 2. As the repository of all his interests (2 Timothy 1:12). 3. As being united to Him by love bonds which neither the mere incidents of life, nor satanic power could sever (Romans 8:38, 39). III. A MEANS OF PERPETUATING LIVING RELATIONS BETWEEN HIM AND THE CHURCHES which he bad formed. He expresses his confidence — 1. In the sympathy of the Corinthians (2 Corinthians 1:14, 15; 2 Corinthians 2:3). 2. In the steadfastness of the Galatians in Christianity (Galatians 5:10). 3. In the obedience of the Thessalonians to his teaching (2 Thessalonians 3:4). 4. In the purity and intelligence of the Romans (Romans 15:14). 5. In the final perfectness of the Philippians. IV. THE SEED HE LIVED TO DISSEMINATE AMONG MEN. (G. G. Ballard.)
1. That the work of salvation in this people would be perfected. They were running a race, and he was confident that they would receive the prize. They were the workmanship of the Divine redeeming hand; Paul was confident that the work would not be forsaken by the Workman. That God would perfect this work. "It is God that worketh in you." Paul knew that his own influence was nothing, except as it was the medium and the vehicle of the influence of God. 2. That the work would be finished in the day of the Lord. In that day every work will be tried as by fire. God's work in this people would appear then to be perfected. A sublime persuasion, this! To stand on some moorland and see some young oaks planted, and feel quite confident that they would grow to perfection; to visit a dockyard slip, and to see the timbers of the keel of a first-rate man-of-war laid down, and to feel confident that she would answer every trial of her strength, until she had rendered full service to the nation; to be present at some important public undertaking, and to feel sure that it would be noble, and prosperous, and of national benefit; to hear the birth cry of a human being, and to feel confident that its path from the cradle to the sepulchre would be that shining brighter and brighter unto perfect day, are all glorious positions; but they cannot be compared, so far as true greatness and moral grandeur are concerned, with the position of Paul here. The sublimity of this persuasion is largely connected with the love of Paul's heart. The multitude are thoughtless, indifferent, and careless about each other, or they are envious and malicious. But this is true, sincere, pure Christian love, which writes, "Being confident of this very thing." II. ON WHAT DID PAUL'S CONFIDENCE REST? 1. On the character and resources of the Worker. It does not rest on the Church. Not because Church polity is all right, because you are thoroughly orthodox, nor because your modes of worship are just what they ought to be. The foundation of his confidence was God in Christ. Men fail in work by loss of means and of power, by change of purpose, by their dependence upon others, and by reason of death. But it is not thus with the Creator. 2. On the nature and quality of the work about which he is assured. The work is remedial to the creature, and supremely honourable to the redeeming God. 3. On the fact that the commencement of this work was by God Himself. The beginning is the pledge of the consummation. Even a wise man does nothing at random. 4. On the fact that a day is fixed for exhibiting this work in all its completeness. The day of Christ, without redemption, would indeed be a dark day. 5. He happens to blend with all this his own experience of the faithfulness and wealth of the redeeming God — Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. III. HOW DID THIS CONFIDENCE OPERATE ON PAUL? 1. It did not prevent Paul praying for these people. 2. It gave fervency and gladness to his intercessions. 3. It did not keep Paul from exhorting the people and directing them to the use of means. Conclusion: Cherish such confidence concerning yourselves and each other, but be devoutly careful not to abuse it. (S. Martin.)
II. ITS CHOSEN INSTRUMENTALITY — holy men (1 Corinthians 4:9). III. ITS MODEL — Divine perfectness (Matthew 5:48). IV. ITS LAW OF ACCOMPLISHMENT — gradual but certain progression — "begun, perform." V. ITS GUARANTEE OF COMPLETION — God's will. His willingness is — 1. Revealed in His word. 2. Embodied in Christ the Foundation. 3. Ratified by experience. 4. Plighted to us in the earnest of the Spirit. (G. G. Ballard.)
1. Its nature. A new creation (Ephesians 2:10), without which we have neither will nor power to perform good works (Philippians 2:13). 2. Its property. It is a good work because — (1) (2) (3) II. THE GROUNDS OF PAUL'S CONFIDENCE THAT THIS GOOD WORK WOULD BE COMPLETED. 1. The perfections of God's works (Deuteronomy 32:4) in creation, providence, and grace. 2. The atonement of Christ (John 10:15). 3. The Christian's union to Christ (John 14:19). 4. The earnest of the Spirit (2 Corinthians 1:22). 5. The nature of the life Christ gives (John 10:28). 6. The intercession of Christ (Hebrews 7:29; John 11:42; John 17:24). (S. Barnard.)
1. It is good. Why? Because —(1) God the best of beings is the author of it. He is the author of the wisdom that designed it; the influence which begins, continues, and completes it; the holiness which is its pattern; the love which it displays; the means whereby it is performed.(2) Its effects are good.(a) In respect of the soul that is the subject of it, which passes from death unto life, from sin to holiness, etc.(b) In respect to families. When this good work is begun in the hearts of parents religion with all its pleasantness and peace dwells in the house, and God commands His blessing.(c) Upon ministers, who thereby are made not ashamed of the gospel.(d) Upon the Church, whose increase and prosperity is the edification and comfort of individual believers.(e) To the world. Every convert exercises, like salt, a purifying and preserving influence.(f) On heaven itself (Luke 15:10).(3) Its end and completion are good. The soul is born for glory. 2. It is a work.(1) It is primarily and chiefly the operation of the Holy Spirit. He removes all obstacles from the heart, and gives the truth free course over the inner man.(2) It is begun and carried on by means of the Word, which is the power of God unto salvation.(3) All the faculties of the soul which is the subject of it are brought into lively and diligent exercise: serious thought, anxious inquiry, restless desire, fervent prayer, repentance, faith, love. II. ITS IMPORTANT SITUATION — "in you." Not only in the head but in the heart. 1. It is evident that it is an inward work from the many figures which denote it — temple; inner man; good seed. 2. How does it exist then? (1) (2) (3) 1. This inward religion will be evidenced by corresponding fruits without. 2. You in whom this good work is be thankful, for "by the grace of God you are what you are." Be anxious, watchful, prayerful, too, that it may go on. 3. You in whom it is begun, but fear that it is not, compare what your feelings and desires are with what they were. 4. You who think it is within you, but whose life proves that it is not, fear and tremble. 5. You who show no desire for it — if there is not a good work in you, there is an evil work there, evil in its origin, effects, end. Contemplate your danger. (Congregational Remembrancer.) I. A WONDERFUL FACT. "He who began the work." 1. The work is Divine. No part of God's work bears so distinctly the signs of divinity (James 1:18). Human agency is the channel. 2. The work is gracious. Wisdom is here and power, but goodness is a special feature. God's compassion in the gospel is a power to make us good. To make men wise, rich, happy, healthy, is a great work — but to make them good is better (2 Thessalonians 2:16-17). 3. The work is progressive. The stages of spiritual life are like those of physical life advancing towards manhood. II. A GLORIOUS CERTAINTY. 1. The resources of God are inexhaustible (Isaiah 46:9-10). 2. The faithfulness of God is unfailing (Hosea 2:20). 3. Perfection is God's end in everything. (Weekly Pulpit.)Whether this good work relates entirely to the special act of beneficence which had called forth this Epistle may be fairly disputed. Taken upon this narrow ground the apostle's joy would be but the refinement of selfishness. Rather he lays down a great principle respecting the Divine method of working, viz., to begin is to finish, and that principle, wide enough to encompass the universe, will also comprehend every detail of Christian service. I. GOD WORKS BY A PLAN — to prepare manhood for the final day — a period of time, or a perfection of development; the "day" of death, of judgment, or of the completeness of Christian manhood. II. GOD IS NOT FICKLE IN THE PROSECUTION OF HIS PURPOSES. He begins not that He may conduct an experiment, but that He may perform a design. III. GOD HAS SO REVEALED HIMSELF in the education of the individual and the training of society AS TO JUSTIFY "THE MOST EMPHATIC EXPRESSION OF "CONFIDENCE" ON THE PART OF HIS CHURCH. The past fortells the future. When the world was young it needed Elijahs, Ezekiels, and Daniels; but the richer the world becomes in history the louder and sweeter will be its tone of confidence. God cannot publish any amended edition of Himself. You may therefore make the past the source of the widest inferences. (J. Parker, D. D.)
I. THAT REAL RELIGION IS A WORK UPON THE HEART. 1. In opposition to the mere profession of orthodox sentiments and opinions. The truth may be held in unrighteousness. Christ is not only set forth a propitiation before His people, but is made unto them "wisdom," etc. The gospel must be received as well as believed. 2. In opposition to a bare attendance upon the prescribed duties of religion. This will indeed follow but only as a means, not as an end. II. THAT THIS WORK IS A GOOD WORK. 1. It has respect to the immortal soul. 2. It qualifies for fellowship with God the chief good. 3. It is productive of good fruits. 4. Its fruition is glory. III. THAT IT IS THE PROVINCE OF GOD TO BEGIN THIS WORK. Every other cause is inadequate. IV. THAT WHEREVER GOD BEGINS A WORK OF GRACE HE WILL CARRY IT ON AND PERFECT IT. 1. He cannot be at a loss to accomplish the work He has commenced. As it is not more difficult to create than to uphold, so it is as easy for Him to communicate great supplies of grace as it was to bestow it at the first. 2. To suppose otherwise would be altogether inconsistent with His purposes of grace and love. 3. But God will perfect His work by the use of means. (1) (2) V. THAT THE SECOND COMING OF CHRIST IS THE PERIOD WHEN THE WORK OF GRACE SHALL BE PERFECTED AND PUBLICLY RECOGNIZED. (Congregational Remembrancer.)
I. THIS WORK CONSISTS in — 1. A gradual purification of our nature. Regeneration is the first act, but by mournful experience Paul knew, and we know, that the remains of depravity are left behind. These it is the work of sanctification to remove.(1) It clarifies the sight of believers, enabling them more distinctly to discern Divine things.(2) It purges the conscience, causing it to pronounce more correctly on the relations of the conduct to the law and to the gospel.(3) It brings to light the lines of the Divine image already engraven on the heart. 2. A correspondent purification of our lives so that our obedience gradually approaches nearer the standard of holiness (Ephesians 2:10).(1) Evil propensities are diminished.(2) The graces produced by regeneration are strengthened: Faith, humility, love. II. THE MOTIVES WHICH SHOULD INDUCE US TO SEEK THIS SANCTIFICATION. 1. God commands it. 2. The love of Christ urges it. 3. We can only be prepared for glory by it. 4. It alone will enable us to glorify God. (J. Foot, D. D.)
1. His toil and suffering shall be remunerated. 2. His government be vindicated. 3. His glory be revealed. 4. All men be brought into closest relations with Him. 5. His kingship receive universal recognition on whose head are many crowns.That day is — (1) (2) (3) (G. G. Ballard.)
II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. (G. G. Ballard.)
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
(Clerical Library.)
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
(J. Paget, D. D.)
(J. Daille.)
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
(J. Hutchinson, D. D.)
(Dean Vaughan.)
II. LOVING THUS HOW NATURAL THAT HE SHOULD PRAY ABOUT THEIR LOVE. He asks that the great love faculty should fill their souls. "In all knowledge." There is the knowledge of the schoolboy, of the well-informed man, of the philosopher. Here it is the latter, the higher knowledge, such as is strong meat to the strong man. "In all perception." The first term deals with the general knowledge of the gospel; this comes down to particulars of Christian apprehension, "That ye may approve things that are excellent" or "try things that differ." It is good to have the faculty for so discerning, that we may never call darkness light; but the apostle prays for more, even that in the region of things, all of which are good and true, they may discern the most excellent, always seeing and choosing the best. Again, there are different ways of doing good things. So that the apostle goes on to pray that they may be "sincere and without offence" or "stumbling" — anything that prevents advance. III. THE PRAYER IS SUMMED UP in the words: "that ye may be filled with the fruits of righteousness." In so doing they would have the sublime glory of living to the praise of God — the highest end and aim of being. Men living the Christian life by distinct intent and aim achieve the noblest thing in actual result. Bat a little thing does it seem? Every little stream contributes to the majestic swell of the ocean, so every fruitful life is sending its little to contribute to the fulness of the Divine glory. IV. THE RELATION BETWEEN THE PHRASE, "THAT YOUR LOVE MAY ABOUND," AND ALL THAT COMES AFTER. That is the root phrase, the key to the position, mother to all the virtues. Love will produce all these, and make a beautiful character. The soul is a living house having many doors. Some, the greatest number, stand by the door of reason, and strive to enter, and many go in. But when they get in they find the house full of company. How did they get in? By other doors, or by the windows. From deep convictions, blossoming hopes, and heavenly aspirings, but most got in by the door of love. This is not so imposing a way of entrance. There is no great knocker to this door called logic. You come in by it softly, you do but whisper, and are admitted. V. THE PRACTICAL USE of all this is that we should take the best things we can think of to promote the aboundings of love. (A. Raleigh, D. D.)The sixth verse was like the peal of a trumpet; the seventh is the low sweet murmur of the summer morning. The expression of the text is of singular beauty. Who can measure the circumference of a truly philanthropic heart? Has arithmetic any cunning art by which to calculate the girth of that organ of affection? A man in Rome carrying the Philippian Church in his heart! I. HE WHO CARRIES THE WORLD ELSEWHERE THAN IN HIS HEART WILL SOON WISH TO CAST OFF HIS BURDEN. II. HE WHO CARRIES THE GOOD IN HIS HEART CAN NEVER BE DESOLATE. Loneliness is an impossibility to the well-stored heart. III. HE WHOSE HEART IS ENGAGED WITH THE TENDER OFFICES OF AFFECTION IS THE PROFOUNDEST INTERPRETER AND THE MOST EFFICIENT SERVANT OF MANKIND. IV. HE WHO ENSHRINES HIS BENEFACTORS IN HIS HEART HAS BROKEN THE DOMINION OF SELFISHNESS. (J. Parker, D. D.)
1. They sympathized with the apostle in his trials. These trials arose not out of political or moral offences, but out of his defence and propagation of the gospel. The Philippians made common cause with him, supporting him by gifts and prayer. The true character of Christianity is seen here. When the Jews are in sackcloth and ashes, Esther is pleading their cause; when Peter is in prison, the disciples are praying for his release. The Church is one in adversity as well as prosperity; one in prison as well as in heaven. Remember that as you think of missionaries, and your persecuted brethren in the home, workshop, etc. (Hebrews 13:3). 2. They seconded the apostle's efforts by their lives and labours. They lived the gospel he preached. Their sympathy was deeper than attachment to his person, or admiration of his character. "If ye love Me, keep My commandments." "See how these Christians love one another," was the evidence wrung from minds full of animus. No power can shake the gospel when firmly rooted in the life of the Church. Sceptics may as well scoff at the light of the sun as ignore the gospel of the life and character. II. THE MUTUAL LOVE AND ESTEEM WHICH THIS SERVICE PRODUCES — "I have you in my heart;" as we say of a friend, "He has a warm place in my heart." 1. It was a great love. 2. Constant love. The old adage "out of sight, out of mind," was not true here. 3. Increasing love. Many streams dry up, but "let brotherly love continue." III. THE COMMON SOURCE OF BLESSEDNESS — "partakers with me," etc. 1. By the one sacrifice of Jesus they were saved from sin. There is but one fountain opened for sin. 2. The example of Jesus led them all in the right way. With one accord all believers "show forth the praises of Him who hath called them," etc. 3. His presence was their one source of inspiration. Daily communion with Jesus kept their zeal burning, and their work advancing. 4. His coming was their only hope. (Weekly Pulpit.)Observe — I. WHAT A FAITHFUL MINISTER DELIGHTS TO THINK OF IN HIS FLOCK: That they will be — 1. Steadfast. 2. Progressive. 3. Triumphant. II. WHY HE DELIGHTS TO THINK SO. Because — 1. He loves them. 2. Labours for them. 3. Suffers for them. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
I. THE ADVOCACY OF THE BEST OF CAUSES MAY BRING A MAN INTO SOCIAL HUMILIATION. II. SOCIAL HUMILIATION DOES NOT NECESSARILY INVOLVE MORAL DISHONOUR. III. WHILE THE MORALLY HONOURABLE ARE SUFFERING FROM SOCIAL HUMILIATION THEY WILL NOT BE ABANDONED BY THE PARTAKERS OF THE SAME GRACE. Another proof of the uniting and consolidating force of Christianity. (J. Parker, D. D.)
(The Study.)
(G. G. Ballard.)
( Chrysostom.)
1. This appeal should not be made frequently, or on trivial occasions; but should be reserved for seasons of peculiar solemnity, as here. Paul wanted to give them an assurance of his regard such as would be their consolation when he was gone. 2. But though the parade of this witness should be spared, the consciousness of it should pervade all our life. It is easy to deceive our fellow man. It is healthful to be constantly reminded of an onlooker who is not mocked. His company, however, is shunned by many for good reasons. No man chooses the living God as his habitual company who is not reconciled to him through Christ. 3. What a blessed state to be in; to let all our affections towards our brethren flow and reflow in the Divine presence. II. ITS SOURCE — "the bowels," — the strong compassion of Christ. From that fountain his own pity flowed. 1. He was free to testify, "In me dwelleth no good thing." True; no pity flowed from his cruel heart or dimmed his cruel eye when Stephen died. He was not at that time in Christ. From the memory of his former self he writes Titus 3:3. 2. Now the very love that glowed in the bosom of Jesus was communicated to His disciple. It was not a love of mere nature or an affection of party. 3. His new position gave him a new view and new affections. He had risen with Christ, and from the heavenly places the old divisions between Jew and Greek, etc., had disappeared, and one line only divided the race into two compartments, those who were in Christ Jesus and those who were not. He loved the whole, but rejoiced over the brethren with joy unspeakable. III. ITS CHARACTER AND STRENGTH — "How greatly," etc. 1. Learn from the fact that he called God to witness it, that in order to get into communion with God it is not necessary to banish your brother out of sight. The law is that "he who loveth God, love his brother also." 2. The extent and distribution of his affection — "all." Probably they were not all alike attractive. The longing was one as it burned in Paul's heart; but it was many coloured as it streamed on a promiscuous congregation. Light is for all the same, but it becomes various as it falls on various surfaces. (1) (2) (3) (4) (W. Arnot, D. D.)
1. The restoration of the family likeness. When we see God the Father in each other, we begin to love one another. The spirit of Christ generates that love. When we meet in Christ we experience the first touch of heart. The ministry of the tender mercies of Christ quickens those who are dead in trespasses and sins. 2. On the basis of brotherly love human society is reconstructed. The branches touch each other in the vine. The whole fabric rests on the one corner stone, Christ. By the power of the Cross the clouds of selfishness are rolled back. The social instincts are sanctified to constitute universal society. II. ITS ATTESTATION — "God is my witness." The evidence was an inward consciousness, and an outward life. Omniscience was the final court of appeal. 1. Love to the Church is an evidence of our conversion by the truth (1 John 3:14). 2. Through the Church we commune with God. The heavens declare God's glory, the earth His riches, the Bible His will, human experience in the Church His goodness. The historical side of religion administers to the spiritual. The wisdom of Paul, the zeal of Peter, the affection of John, bring God nearer to the heart. Every believer is a vessel of the Holy Ghost; and to drink of His experience is to commune with the Divine. III. THE FUNCTIONS OF SPIRITUAL LONGINGS. Paul's supreme desire was to be near the Philippians, and to be of service to their growth. Thereby he would witness — 1. To the love of God. 2. Against the hatred of the sinful heart. 3. To the final society of the blest. (Weekly Pulpit.)
II. III. IV. V. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
(J. Parker, D. D.)
(W. Arnot, D. D.)
(W. Arnot, D. D.)
(Bishop Lightfoot.)
I. II. III. IV. (G. G. Ballard.)
I. THE ENLARGEMENT OF THE AFFECTIONS BY THE IMPROVEMENT OF THE INTELLECTUAL POWERS. II. AN INCREASE OF LOVE IN KNOWLEDGE AND JUDGMENT WITH REFERENCE TO THE IMPROVEMENT OF THE MORAL CHARACTER. (C. Lawson.)The prayer tells us that love should be — I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. (J. Lyth, D. D.) I. THE APOSTLE'S ACTION OF PRAYING. The Philippians abounded in love, etc., yet the apostle prayed that they might abound yet more and more. Whence observe — 1. The continual necessity of prayer. Whatsoever graces the Lord hath bestowed on us yet we have still need to pray that we may abound more and more in Him (1 Thessalonians 5:17; James 1:5; 1 Thessalonians 3:12). And the reason why we are continually so to pray is plain; for(1) Such is our weakness through sin, that unto whatsoever measure of grace we have attained, yet stand therein we cannot unless God uphold us (Matthew 14:31; Ephesians 6:20).(2) In whatsoever grace we abound, yet therein we come so short of perfection that we have need to pray that we abound more and more.(3) This, then, may serve to condemn our great slackness, negligence, coldness, and faintness, both in private and public prayer. 2. Christians are not to stand still, or be content with good beginnings, but to grow (Hebrews 6:1; Philippians 3:12). And how should any man think otherwise, considering what enemies hinder our perfection. These continually bid us such battle, that if either we stand or give back we must generally take the foil.(1) Many which seemed to have begun in the spirit make an end in the flesh.(2) Others pause, and, as if they were in danger in every step, move not a foot forward. Nay, not to go forward is to go backward, and not to increase in the graces of God's Spirit is to decrease (Revelation 3:16).(3) Others are content to make a show of going forward for advantage and gain. II. THE THINGS FOR WHICH HE PRAYS. 1. That their love to God and one another might abound.(1) Touching the love of God, how can we love Him enough who so loved us.(2) Love one of another (1 Thessalonians 3:12).(3) Love towards poor saints and afflicted members of Christ (2 Corinthians 8; Deuteronomy 15:7-11); which serveth to condemn the cold love of Christians in our days (1 John 4:20). 2. That they may abound more and more in knowledge, viz., of God's will out of His Word (1 Corinthians 14:20; Hebrews 6:1). This then may teach us —(1) To beware of their leaven who would have shut us up in ignorance, on the ground that it is the mother of devotion, and that the Scriptures are hard to be understood, and perilous to read. But what saith the Holy Ghost? (John 5:29; 2 Peter 3:18; Colossians 3:16.)(2) To give diligence unto the reading, hearing, and meditating upon the Scriptures that we may abound in knowledge and understanding. Very lamentable is it to see so many thousands who are as ignorant of God's Word as when they sat in the darkness of Egypt. 3. That they may abound more and more in all judgment, i.e., in sound judgment, that having their wits exercised through long custom, they may discern both good and evil; and abound also in an experience of spiritual things in themselves, that they might spiritually feel in their hearts that which they knew out of the word (Psalm 34:8). This should teach us to so observe the mercies and judgments of the Lord that we may have an experimental knowledge of them (Psalm 34:6). 4. That their "love" might be grounded in sound "knowledge and judgment," that each having help of other, and being furnished by other, they might the better "discern things that differ." Though we have all knowledge and not love we are nothing. So, on the other hand, though we have all love and no knowledge, it is nothing. Which of these soever grows up without other, like Jonah's gourd, will quickly wither. Our care then must be that our love abound in knowledge, that we may know on whom our love ought principally to be set; and in all judgment, that knowing whom we ought to love we may love them as we ought (Galatians 6:10). Otherwise our love may do more harm than good; as zeal without knowledge. III. THE ENDS WHEREFORE HE PRAYS. 1. That they might discern things that differ one from another, virtue and vice, false and true prophets, corrupt and uncorrupt doctrine, and so might follow the good and fly the bad (Romans 2:18). Very justly, then, are they to be reproved that in seeking after knowledge even out of the Scriptures propose any other end.(1) Such are they that, seeing the Church to lean on the Scriptures, do by their corruptions of the text, their false glosses and conclusions, labour to overthrow the truth and to build their own errors.(2) Others there are whose end is only a vain ostentation, that men may think and speak of them as great rabbins (1 Corinthians 8:1). The end of others is information, so that they may not appear ignorant, but who show no fruits of their knowledge in a godly life. 2. That they might be pure from any leaven of corruption in doctrine, life, or manners as white wool never dyed, fine flour never leavened. For it is not enough to know the difference between purity and impurity (1 Corinthians 5:6-7; Matthew 16:12; 1 Timothy 5:22). 3. That they might not stumble, but hold on a constant course without falling, slipping back, or standing at a stay (Galatians 3:3; Luke 9:62). 4. That they might be fruitful in all good works. (1) (2) (3) (4) IV. OBSERVATIONS FOR OUR INSTRUCTION. 1. We are not only to do the things that are good, but to abound in them (Colossians 1:9-10; John 15:5-8; Acts 9:36). Why? (1) (2) (3) 2. Let this stir us up and forward to every good work. (H. Airay, D. D.) I. CHRISTIAN LOVE IN ITS PROPER GROWTH AND MANIFESTATION. 1. This love is not that specially which was cherished towards the apostle. From his point of view that was already much more than he had looked for. Nor is it brotherly love, or love to all men, or love towards God and Christ, or loving activity in Christian service. It is rather love in the absolute sense of the term — the inward state of the heart, which is also the motive power of the life. 2. It is no mere rhetorical accident which makes this grace the very essence of the renewed life. It is the life of the believer's soul, and the soul of his life. It is with conscious design, therefore, and perfect propriety, that he who penned 1 Corinthians 13 should here specify love as the distinctive mark of the life hid with Christ in God. 3. This love, although the bond of perfectness, is itself never perfect on earth. Here there must be a persistent going on to perfection. The manifold outgoings of love need direction and control.(1) It cannot live forever in a cell, apart from thought (Proverbs 1:4). We are therefore taught that the love of the renewed heart must live in the sphere of increasing spiritual knowledge. (a) (b) 4. The function of love thus regulated is to approve the things that are excellent. Love has to prove and so approve things that differ (marg.) in being better. What are those excellent things? See Philippians 4:8-9. 5. A practical and much needed lesson lies in this. Love may set on foot many schemes of usefulness, and yet the issue may be failure, because the abounding love has not been in knowledge and discernment. It can never be right to cultivate one central grace to the neglect of the others. II. THE PERFECTION OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE THEREBY ATTAINED. 1. "Sincere," i.e., spotless, pure, clear. Some see here a military figure, the result of dividing an army into several sections, so as to separate the more hardy and valiant, as Gideon set apart his three hundred. According to this the word means selected and so excellent. Others see an agricultural figure. Select, pure as corn that is purged by the winnowing fan or threshing roller. But the view that it means tested or judged by the sunbeam is the most probable. Christ's people as here depicted, therefore, are like the gem held up to the sunlight, and found to be without a flaw; walking in the light of truth, and the white radiance of eternity. 2. It follows that they become in relation to others "void of offence," giving no occasion for stumbling. A Christian who is consistent in his own character is also inoffensive in his conduct. His unconscious example, as well as words and deeds, is a power only for good. 3. This he does unto the day of Christ. (J. Hutchinson, D. D.)In one word the apostle prayed that the Philippians might grow. Moral dwarfs never pray that others may become moral giants. A man cannot transcend himself. Only the firmament can embrace the stars. The apostle prays — I. THAT LOVE MAY ABOUND IN MORAL TACT. True love is intelligent. We are to love God with "all our mind." As knowledge is the basis of faith, so is it the first condition of love. II. FOR AN ENLARGEMENT AND QUICKENING OF THE DISCRIMINATING FACULTY, that they might distinguish between things that differ, that so they might elect the right. A man is known by his verdicts. The artist sees where the clown but looks. The more we love Christ the more shall we be qualified to perceive every charm in moral life. He who approves the excellent will defend it. III. FOR THEIR SINCERITY. The word has a double meaning. 1. In the Greek it signifies that which is proved in the sunlight. Christians are to be so true that the solar light of infinite rectitude cannot find any stain or derangement in their character. 2. In the Latin it means "without wax;" clarified honey, free from all admixture. The Christian life is to be so refined as to be thoroughly free from foreign elements. IV. "BEING FILLED," etc. (ver. 11). Paul, beginning at the centre, finds his way to the circumference; beginning with the spiritual, he culminates in the practical (John 15:1-5). See the connection between Christ and fruit. This call to practical life shows that Christianity is not a mocking pretence, a theological dream, or a speculative science, but a sublime, vital, and vitalizing reality. The doctrines acknowledged in this prayer are — 1. That Christian life is progressive. 2. That God is ready to cooperate with His people for their moral enrichment. 3. That the entire manhood is to bear fruit. (J. Parker, D. D.)Let it be your earnest concern and prayer — I. THAT YOUR LOVE MAY ABOUND IN ALL KNOWLEDGE AND JUDGMENT. 1. The love you should aspire after is Christian love.(1) Such as proceeds from faith (Galatians 5:6).(2) Which has for its objects God and Christ, His cause, truths, ordinances, servants, and your fellow creatures.(3) This is the fulfilling of the law, and inspires the soul with a cheerful disposition for and activity in keeping God's commandments (Romans 13:10; 1 John 5:3). 2. Your being Church members supposes that you are already partakers of this love in some prevailing degree, as Paul inferred in this case. Persons lacking this ought not to be Church members; for love is the great band of union and communion. 3. The prayer intimates that it is not perfect, but that you ought to seek further progress in it.(1) There may be something lacking with respect to its disinterestedness, impartiality, and spirituality; or in respect to some instances and exercises of it; or in respect of its constancy, and the degrees of its fervour and activity.(2) Keep before you a humbling sense of defect, and be earnest with God to invigorate and develope it. 4. The text suggests that it should be a judicious love. Light should kindle all your warmth. Without knowledge and judgment your love will be like a land flood, that overfloweth with a rapid stream, but hath no springs to maintain it, or banks to conduct it to a regular course. Take heed of an ignorant, ungovernable, and misjudged love of you know not what, or why. II. THAT YE MAY APPROVE, etc. (ver. 10). We are to prove all things by the unerring touchstone of God's Word, and by a spiritual taste according to it. The more acquaintance we have with the things of God the better they recommend themselves to us (Psalm 34:8; 1 Peter 2:2-3). III. THAT YE MAY BE SINCERE, etc. (ver. 10). Some understand "sincere" as referring to God, and "without offence" as referring to man. But why should not each refer to both? 1. Sincerity is not so much a distinct grace as an essential quality running through all our graces and duties, distinguishing them from false appearances in their exercise towards God and man. 2. "Without offence" (Acts 24:16). IV. "THAT YE MAY BE FILLED," etc. (ver. 11). 1. The nature of a man must be changed in its moral frame by regenerating grace before he can bear fruits of righteousness. 2. They are by Jesus Christ — (1) (2) (3) (J. Guyse, D. D.)
I. THERE WAS LOVE IN THE HEARTS OF THE SAINTS AT PHILIPPI. This was the chief evidence of their being saints. The absence of this, no matter what had been present, would have cast a cloud on their Christian profession. II. THIS LOVE WAS MANIFESTED. It was not stagnant like the waters of a tarn, but flowed as a stream which, descending from the hills, runs through the valleys. Christian benevolence must not Sleep in the depths of your nature. What if God's pity had slept in His! If it be there then make ways for it, so that the living water may reach a thirsty world. III. THE LOVE OF OTHERS MAY BE AFFECTED BY OUR PRAYERS. Sometimes no other agency will succeed, as in the case of a crabbed professing Christian who is impervious to speech, example, and other acts of loving kindness. We can pray that God would expand that Harrow soul. IV. THE LOVE OF A TRUE CHRISTIAN IS NOT A STATIONARY PRINCIPLE: because life underlies it. (S. Martin.)
I. IT DISCERNS SPIRITUALLY, i.e., it sees those objects which belong to the spiritual sphere. Love sees as no other faculty can — 1. The truths of the gospel. 2. God Himself. 3. The precepts of the Saviour. 4. The promises. 5. Christian duty and responsibility. II. IT DISCRIMINATES. Some people say that love is blind, which is true in a sense. But love has also widely open eyes. It separates right from wrong views of God, of human character, of Christian duty. Prejudice never discriminates, nor pride, vanity, cowardice, pugnacity, ambition. III. IT APPRECIATES. Dislike and hatred depreciate; indifference values nothing; love approves what is excellent. You will see what is excellent in others in the degree of your love. If you have not Christian love you will fail to see much that is Christian in God's Church. IV. IT PREVENTS MISTAKES. It makes a man sincere and without offence. The sincere but unloving are sometimes most offensive. The deficient in love are often most insincere. The two things in social and Church life are often separated. You have the sincere and the loving as separate classes. But why should they not be brought together? The Christian is not obtrusive, obstinate, exacting, compromising. V. IT REMAINS UNIMPAIRED TO THE END. The understanding may fail, and the memory, but love never. A beautiful illustration of this we sometimes see in old Christians. Conclusion: The day of Christ comes apace. In the fires of that day love only will survive. (S. Martin.)
1. For the steady increase of their love in the knowledge of truth and in the moral tact of its appreciation; 2. For their perfection internal and external of moral character; and — 3. For their final acceptance thus perfected in the testing day of Christ. I. THE REGULATING PRINCIPLE OF CHRISTIAN LIFE. 1. The Philippians had been already taught of God to love Himself and one another. The apostle now prays for its abundant increase, not by arbitrary and absolute effusion into their hearts, but as the result of being fed by Divine truth and diligently practised. 2. "Knowledge" is the apprehension or arrangement of truth in the mind, but spiritual knowledge, partly as being bound up with our spiritual nature and needs, and chiefly as being imparted by the Holy Ghost.(1) As love enlarges and strengthens the power of attaining religious knowledge, so increasing knowledge feeds love in return.(2) All knowledge is summed up in knowing Christ. All truth is now "as the truth is in Jesus." 3. Judgment is the faculty of spiritual discernment: that moral sensitiveness of the renewed mind which is quick to perceive the good and evil in every doctrine, practice, and contingency of daily life (Hebrews 5:14). As knowledge is truth stored up in the mind, so judgment is the mind itself applying that knowledge to the endless occasions which arise for distinguishing between what should be sought and what shunned. 4. The approval of things that are excellent is the operation of this knowledge and discrimination in the mind itself — the precious insight of love which, using its knowledge and its tact, distinguishes in every case what is more excellent and at once approves of it. It is the inward legislator that often tells us what is the commandment where outward legislation fails. The praise of charity in 1 Corinthians 13 is little more than the praise of its marvellous discrimination. Almost all that can look like, without being, religion is there condemned by the judge among the graces. II. From the regulating principle the prayer now passes to THE PERFECT CHARACTER, as established in the world, under the guidance and control of enlightened love. Paul exhibits the whole compass of godliness under two aspects, inward and outward — first in their separation and then in their union. 1. Sincere signifies that flawless simplicity of heart which is able to endure every test. The last and most perfect test is the eye of God. What the sun is in nature the Great Detector is in religious life. Those whom God sees thus pure in heart have it as the reward of their purity that they see God. This sacred simplicity is a pearl of great price. Hence it is made a matter of prayer; such cleanness is the express creation of God; but not so as to exclude the consecration of our own effort and habitual watchfulness. 2. "Without offence." The prayer asks for preservation through the blessing of God on the wise solicitude of charity, from doing anything that should hinder the salvation of any one. The Christian's thoughtful charity must show its tact in this that his conduct shall at once rebuke the sin of others, and direct them to the beauty of holiness. 3. When the prayer proceeds to the "fruit of righteousness" it completes the picture of this perfection, at the same time that it explains more fully the meaning of "sincere and without offence."(1) Righteousness is neither that imputed nor that implanted alone, but that which comes through our union with Christ and unites in fruit.(2) The fruit or produce of the new method of making us right in Christ is the entire compass of godliness in all its tempers and acts.(3) "Pilled," sounds out clearly the note of Christian perfection attainable because prayed for, prayed for because attainable. It leaves no room for the notion of any necessary defect in the religious life. III. We must go back to that central word, "THE DAY OF CHRIST," which COMPLETES THE MEANING OF THE PRAYER. Jesus the Judge will in that day acknowledge the purity which He now approves, and confirm and reward the righteousness He now creates. Christian integrity, sealed in one sense by death, is to be reexamined, and finally, with the whole universe as witness, ratified in the great day. Conclusion: Those who are tempted by their creed or indolence to rely on the supposed necessity that a salvation once begun must be finally accomplished are reminded by the tone and words of the prayer that without their inward and outward holiness that blessed issue shall not be attained. (W. B. Pope, D. D.)
II. III. (G. G. Ballard.)
2. Is becoming when an intelligent being addresses the Divine Intelligence. 3. Is essential, from the very nature of prayer. 4. Affords a fixed ground for the exercise of faith. 5. Emboldens supplication. 6. Inspires hope of a definite response. (G. G. Ballard.)
II. CHRISTIAN LOVE. 1. Receives its first impulse from God's love. 2. Is sustained in activity by its power. 3. Moves in a refluent orbit of increasing circles which continuously grow (Romans 5:20). III. ABOUNDING LOVE. As the river, although perfect, perpetuates itself only by its ever-onward flow, as the full ocean at spring tide "aboundeth yet more and more," so love, in abounding, gathers that true freshness, vigour, and activity, whereby it has power to abound yet more and more. (G. G. Ballard.)
2. Are in harmony with His reign of grace. 3. Bring to us the fullest manifestation of His love. 4. Thrill us with holy excitement though performing monotonous duties, and inspire a holy daring though in view of the fiery trial. 5. Overleap in their impetuous progress every landmark of stern propriety set up by cold conventionalism. 6. Know no limits save "knowledge and judgment" (G. G. Ballard.)
I. We see what St. Paul takes for granted as THE UNDERLYING SUBSTANCE, THE RAW MATERIAL OF THE DIVINE LIFE OF THE SOUL OF MAN — "Love." 1. He does not pray that their knowledge may abound more and more in love. Whenever knowledge and love are put in competition, the precedence is always given to love. As compared with knowledge love is intrinsically stronger, and worth more practically. To be knit to God by love is better than to speculate about Him. To enwrap other men in the flame of a passionate enthusiasm is better than to analyze rival systems of ethical, social, or political truth. 2. A personal affection for Jesus our Lord is the first step, the fundamental thing in real Christianity. What is it that provokes love?(1) Beauty, and our Lord's moral beauty acts upon the affections of a true soul just as the sun acts upon the petals of an unopened bud.(2) One specific kind of moral beauty — generosity. The generosity of Jesus in giving Himself to die for us appeals even more powerfully than the faultless beauty of His character. "The love of Christ constraineth us."(3) It is a distinct endowment, an infused grace, shed abroad in the heart by the Holy Ghost. 3. To love Christ is to love(1) God; for God in Him is made apprehendible and approachable.(2) Man, in Him the representative.(3) Thus love to the Saviour is the common source of all that is not spiritual in religion, and most fruitful and creative in philanthropy. II. St. Paul would have this love ABOUND MORE AND MORE IN KNOWLEDGE — ἐπιγνωσις — the higher knowledge. 1. There is a period in the growth of love when such knowledge is imperatively required. In its earliest stages the loving soul lives only in the warmth and light of its object. It asks no questions; it only loves. But from the nature of the case this period comes to an end, not because love grows cold but because it becomes more exacting. It cannot live apart from thought, and sooner or later must come to an understanding with it. It must know something accurately about its object, and begins to ask questions which must be wisely and truly answered, or in its deep disappointment it will sicken and die. 2. How repeatedly this truth is realized in the case of the sons of deeply religious people, and in people who have been deeply religious themselves, but have passed from fervent love to deep despair, because its training in knowledge has been neglected. 3. This law will explain what happened in the Early Church. At first love reigned alone, unenquiring, ecstatic. But when the Gentiles pressed into the fold questions could not be but asked. And so in God's providence love had to, and did, grow more and more in knowledge. Each of the four groups of St. Paul's Epistles marks a distinct stage in the doctrinal insight of the Church. Each of the great Alexandrian teachers, Clement, , Dionysius, , and Cyril poured a flood of light upon the Christian conscience. The Church passed from the agonies of the Coliseum and the catacombs to define, and to recognize before she defined, the unchanging faith at Nicaea, Constantinople, Ephesus, and Chalcedon. 4. What has been said applies to education. This must begin with the heart. Until a pupil's affections are won, the true groundwork of the process is not mastered. The repression of love will assuredly, sooner or later, avenge itself. Witness the case of J.S. Mill. (Canon Liddon.)
I. KNOWLEDGE REVEALS CHARACTER AND CHARACTER DRAWS OUT LOVE. We can only love a person whom we know to be lovable. This holds especially true of our relations to God. Enmity comes of ignorance of Him. Hence, in Jesus He has given us a revelation of His heart, and to know Christ is to love God. "My people is destroyed for lack of knowledge," is the epitaph written over the graves of scores of dead Christians. Neglecting the diligent study of the Scriptures they have no nutriment for their love, and it starves. II. KNOWLEDGE OF GOD BRINGS US INTO COMMUNION WITH THAT DIVINE LIFE WHICH IS THE SPRING OF ALL DIVINE LOVE. If God is love, the more we come into fellowship with Himself the more we shall come into the exercise and experience of His love. But it is only through knowledge that we can come into this experience. (A. J. Gordon.)
II. How CHRISTIANS GAIN THIS TRUE, THOUGH PARTIAL, KNOWLEDGE OF GOD. 1. By the light of nature, "The invisible things," etc. 2. By Divine revelation. Though God cannot tell men in any language all things about Himself, He can tell some things in their language which they can understand. III. THEIR TRUE LOVE FOR GOD IS FOUNDED ON THEIR TRUE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD. They do not love or worship an unknown God. Knowledge not ignorance is the mother of their devotion: which will appear if we consider — 1. That if Christians should love God for what is not true concerning Him, they would love a false character of God, which would not be true, but false love — the same as loving a false god, which is the essence of idolatry. 2. It is the knowledge which Christians have of the real and supreme excellency of God that lays them under moral obligation to love Him supremely. The more they know of God the more they feel themselves bound to love Him with all their heart.Improvement: If Christians have some true knowledge of God from His works and Word, then — 1. They may have some true knowledge of every doctrine that God has revealed. 2. There is a propriety in preaching upon any doctrine that God has revealed. 3. Christians have no right to disbelieve any doctrine because there is something mysterious in it. If we disbelieve on this ground, we must disbelieve everything. 4. Those who have gained this certain knowledge ought to contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to the saints. 5. There is no excuse for religious errors. (N. Emmons, D. D.)
II. JUST CONCEPTIONS OF THE TRUTH OF GOD ARE INDISPENSABLE TO THE POSSESSION OF TRUE HOLINESS. What is holiness but obedience to truth; truth desired, loved, obeyed? But how is truth to be obeyed unless it is known? It is an unchanging law of our being that the heart is affected through the medium of the understanding. III. WITHOUT THE SPIRIT OF THEOLOGICAL RESEARCH IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO MAKE RAPID ADVANCES IN THE DIVINE LIFE. Christians have much to learn of God that they may desire greater manifestations of His glory; of themselves, that they may be stimulated to greater attainments; of their obligations, that they may press after perfect holiness. There are, of course, instances in which growth in knowledge does not secure growth in grace; but that is because truth does not make its appropriate impression on the mind, and is opposed by sin. But the clearer our views of God the more fervent our love of Him; of sin, the more self-abasing our repentance; of Christ, the stronger our faith; of duty, the stronger our desires to perform it. IV. THE ATTAINMENT OF RELIGIOUS KNOWLEDGE IS THE SOURCE OF PURE AND ELEVATED ENJOYMENT. Of all the prospective emotions the desire of knowledge is the most exalted. The pleasures of intellect transcend those of sense. How much purer and higher the felicity consequent on advances in the knowledge of God. The veriest infant in the school of Christ finds his understanding satisfied, his heart filled with love at the discovery of every new principle in the Word of God. V. RELIGIOUS KNOWLEDGE WIDENS THE SPHERE OF CHRISTIAN USEFULNESS. A well-informed Christian possesses a weight of character and a power of moral feeling, which exert the best influence. Such a man is always ready for action. If the spirit of His master rests upon him in proportion to his intellectual attainments, he will instruct the ignorant, etc. The Church has sustained no small detriment from the ignorance of good men. VI. THE CHARACTER OF OUR AGE FURNISHES A REASON FOR SOLICITUDE IN RELATION TO THE DOCTRINES OF THE BIBLE. There is a strange apathy to the truth. It is an age of business, and not of investigation. Conclusion: 1. Ministers ought not to be reproached for instructive preaching, and for not yielding to the demand for sensationalism. 2. The love of truth is the conclusive test of Christian character. 3. Rest not in intellectual attainments in religion. (Gardiner Spring, D. D.)
I. ADVANCED KNOWLEDGE is derived from — 1. Experience. 2. Attentive study of — (1) (2) (3) (4) II. MORAL PERCEPTION. 1. Results from the full exertion of every moral sense.(1) There are many things in Christian life which cannot be formulated, but must be felt to be known.(2) Grace awakens the moral senses. Love makes them delicately sensitive to spiritual things. Christian life appeals to them. Experience comes in the exercise of them.(3) This experience produces a profounder knowledge and a deeper love by intensifying spiritual perceptions, because — 2. It is a medium of communication with the unseen and eternal. 3. As a medium of communication with God it makes the soul superior to, and independent of, the senses. When these close at eventide, the moral senses only open wider for the morning sun. 4. It robes the soul with a halo of light more assuring and glorious than "the glory cloud" emitted. 5. It imparts to the soul that delicate tact and instinct which almost instinctively perceives what is right, and almost unconsciously shrinks from what is wrong. 6. It is indestructible by death, and shall be an imperishable avenue for the soul's perpetual advance in knowledge. (G. G. Ballard.)
(J. Hutchinson, D. D.)
(Webster and Wilkinson.)
(W. B. Pope, D. D.)
(J. Hutchinson, D. D.)
(Bp. Simpson)
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
(R. Johnstone, LL. B.)
(A. J. Gordon.)
(A. J. Gordon.)
II. III. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
II. REQUIRES energy — till the day of Christ. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
II. COMMANDS a wide field of effort, viz., the bad, the good, the better, the best — in character, life, doctrine, practice, enjoyment, attainment. III. IMPLIES the admission and use of a noble liberty of thought, judgment, and action. IV. INVOLVES a weighty and far-reaching responsibility. V. Is ESSENTIAL to a pure and blameless life. (G. G. Ballard.)
1. Know what course it would be right to take in spiritual difficulties. The banker draws his finger across a bank note and says, "That is forged," or "That is genuine." His senses are exercised to prove them. So we ought to be able to perceive the signs of evil, however covered up, and the marks of God's will, however faint. 2. Understand the relation between duty and comfort. II. A PURPOSE PLACED IN VIEW OF THIS SPIRIT OF DISCERNMENT. 1. It has respect to the day of Christ, when every man's work will be tried.(1) So we are not to purpose our own satisfaction. Many endeavour to attain certain excellencies so that they may stand well with themselves.(2) We are not to purpose to be satisfied with the opinions of the world. There are men who think that if they secure the approbation of their neighbours, they are as good as they need be. 2. It has set before it sincerity and blamelessness.(1) The Christian is seen standing in the light, and gives no occasion for others to stumble against him. Seeing him in family, business, party, or Church, they have no cause to say, "He acts so as to stand between me and Christ."(2) To be counted sincere and without offence is the proof of a high attainment. The Christian must not be behind, but before men of the world in good points of character and conduct. (D. G. Watt, M. A.)
1. That we have some ideal of duty. 2. That we are honest in trying to realize this ideal. The words before us suggest these necessities. I. AS CHRISTIANS WE OUGHT TO APPROVE THINGS THAT ARE EXCELLENT. 1. Not merely things which are opposed, or differ, as good and bad. It requires no gift of grace to do this. Natural conscience tells us what is right and wrong. All know that truth is better than falsehood. When men call good evil, they are condemned as much by the world as the Church. It is melancholy to think, however, that some have fallen as low as this in Christian communities, and make a gain of godliness. 2. Paul had a higher level of thought in view — a certain spiritual sensitiveness which recoils from evil, and is drawn to good. 3. We all fail more or less in the cultivation of this higher mindedness. The world is too much with us, weighing down our desires, and whispering a religion of convenience, rather than of aspiration. Our frequent failures, too, tend to keep us contented at a low level. 4. The fineness of spiritual perception is of value in the world. It is a key which unlocks secrets of character. It is not easily deceived. It knows what is true and excellent in art, literature, society, and politics, more readily than others who let their moral ideals grow dim. II. THE FURTHER NECESSITY OF OUR BEING SINCERE AND WITHOUT OFFENCE. Our life and thought must be knit together, our ideal translated into fact. 1. Sincerity is the basis of all good character. A man whose inner and outer life is a contradiction loses even the respect of the world. It would be better if all Christian Churches were more intent on the realities of Christian character; their reward would be greater, and their contentions less. 2. We are also to be without offence. (Principal Tulloch.)
1. Against all forms of it. We are all in danger of it, and its sources are numberless, insidious, and within our own breast. It arises from the prevalent excitement; men pleasing, fiction, ritualism. 2. Against religious insincerity. Here the danger is greatest. Men don't counterfeit copper, but gold, He that takes a bad sovereign loses twenty times as much as he who takes a bad shilling. Hence the Word of God is singularly full, and strong against this evil, and religion is described as "wisdom that cometh from above;" without hypocrisy; faith unfeigned; unfeigned love of the brethren; love without dissimulation. 3. Remember our Lord's conduct against it. Every other form of evil is condemned, but with pity and hope. Hypocrisy is branded as beyond the reach of mercy. II. A FEW WORDS TO PROMOTE SINCERITY. A life sincere and without reproach is sure to be — 1. Harmless and useful. No stumbling block is more fatal than insincerity. We naturally trust the appearance of goodness; but if it proves rottennesss, and gives way, we stumble and hurt ourselves. Few things stagger young Christians more than the inconsistencies of older Christians. Sincerity, however, silences reproach, inspires confidence, commands respect, kindles affection, draws to fellowship. 2. Strong. St. James speaks of a "double-minded man," i.e., a man with two souls — one his real self, the other what he pretends to be. These are sure to play at see-saw. Such a life resembles ploughing with an ox and an ass, always ungainly and inefficient. Such a life is sure to stifle prayer. Reuben was unstable as water, and he did not excel. In opposition to this, the Bible commends the single heart and the single eye. What a man sees clearly he can grip tightly: when he sees his course plainly he goes on confidently. 3. Happy. When conscience smiles all is sunshine; when it frowns it will be to a man what Mordecai was to Haman. "Our rejoicing is this: the testimony of our conscience," etc. 4. Pre-eminently a life with God. 5. Will find its consummation in the coming of the Lord. (J. Aldis.)
I. INTERNAL SINCERITY. This involves — 1. A concentratedness of heart upon one object. 2. A thoroughness of life's uniformity to that one object. 3. An unostentatious but manifest integrity. 4. The completeness of that manifestation shall be proportionate to the brightness of the testing light. II. EXTERNAL BLAMELESSNESS, 1. Without being found guilty of an offence. 2. Without giving one. 3. Without taking one. III. A PRESENT STATE OF LIFE, WITH A GLORIOUS FUTURE DESTINATION. Then — 1. Life shall be judged. 2. Life shall be made manifest. 3. Rectitude of life shall be approved. 4. Rectitude of life shall be rewarded. 5. The "good work" begun in grace shall be crowned in glory. (G. G. Ballard.)
(J. Aldis.)
(R. Johnstone, LL. B.)
(J. Aldis.)
(R. Johnstone, LL. B.)
(J. Tesseyman.)
(J. Aldis.)
(J. Aldis.)
II. III. IV. (J. Lyth, D. D.) I. II. III. IV. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
1. Learn to beware of them who tell you that our good works are that righteousness whereby we are justified before God. As well say that the fruit is the tree. 2. Beware of them that tell you that men not begotten in the faith of Christ are able to do the things that are good and pleasing to God. 3. Let this teach us how to examine our works whether they be good or no. Do they proceed from a lively faith in Christ Jesus? II. THEIR AUTHOR. Christ who is the author of every good thing in us by the grace of His Holy Spirit (2 Corinthians 3:5; Philippians 2:13). 1. Let this warn us against them who would persuade us that we are able of ourselves to do that which is good. 2. Let this teach us to give all the praise to Him to whom it is due (Revelation 5:13). III. THEIR END (1 Corinthians 10:31; Matthew 5:16; 1 Peter 2:12). Let this try our motives. Do we do good that we may gain heaven or that we may glorify God? (H. Airay, D. D.)
1. Integrity is the fruit toward God and man. 2. Tenderness of conscience. 3. With these and other virtues we are to be filled. 4. Although the world may reproach us. II. THE MEANS — Union with Christ. Granted this, good works are inevitable, as a good tree must produce good fruits. III. THE END. God can take delight in nothing but holiness. It is His own nature. (J. Summerfield, A. M.)
II. RIGHTEOUSNESS OF HEART IS SELF-DISSEMINATING. Its fruit is — 1. Living. 2. Of harmonious unity. 3. Luxuriant. III. RIGHTEOUSNESS OF HEART, THE ONLY THING THAT CAN FILL THE CAPACITIES OF MAN. IV. FULNESS OF RIGHTEOUSNESS — fruit, is all Divine. It is Divine — 1. In its source — "God giveth the increase." 2. In its medium of communication — "which is by Jesus Christ." 3. In its end — "unto the glory and praise of God." (1) (2) (G. G. Ballard.)
(J. Hutchison, D. D.)
(J. Daille.)
(H. W. Beecher.)
II. WHAT THAT FRUIT IS WHICH A GOOD CHRISTIAN BRINGS FORTH. 1. A Christian brings forth inward fruit: "love, joy, peace, long suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith." 2. A Christian brings forth outward fruit.(1) The fruit of good discourse; "a wholesome tongue is a tree of life." Gracious speeches fall from the lips of a godly man, as fruit from a tree.(2) The fruit of good works. God will say at the last day, Show Me thy faith by thy works. 3. A Christian brings forth kindly fruit. The godly man bringeth forth his fruit; that is, he brings forth that fruit which is proper for him to bear. But what is this kindly and proper fruit? I answer, when we are good in our callings and relations; in a magistrate, justice is kindly fruit; in a minister, zeal; in a parent, instruction; in a child, reverence; in a master, good example; in a servant, obedience; in the husband, love; in the wife, submission; in a tradesman, diligence; in a soldier, innocence. A tree of God's planting brings forth His fruit, that which is suitable and proper. I shall never believe him to be good, that doth not bear kindly fruit; a good Christian, but a bad master; a good Christian, but a bad parent, doth not sound well. The excellency of a Christian is to bring forth proper fruit; wherein lies the good ness of a member in the body, but to discharge its proper office? the eye is to see, the ear to hear, etc. So the excellency of a Christian is to bring forth that fruit which God hath assigned to him: what is a thing good for which doth not do its proper work? what is a clock good for that will not strike? what is a ship good for that will not sail? what is a rose good for that doth not smell? what is that professor good for that doth not send forth a sweet perfume in his relation? the commendation of a thing is when it puts forth its proper virtue. Not to bring forth suitable fruit, spoils all the other fruit which we bring forth. If a man were to make a medicine, and should leave out the chief ingredient, the medicine would lose its virtue. Relative graces do much beautify and set off a Christian; it is the beauty of a star to shine in its proper orb; relative grace doth bespangle a Christian. 4. A good Christian brings forth seasonable fruit, he that bringeth forth fruit in his season; everything is beautiful in his time. That may be good at one time, which at another may be out of season. There is a great deal of skill in the right timing of a thing; duties of religion must be performed in the fit juncture of time.(1) Christian duties that relate to our neighbour must be observed in their season. Our reproving others must be seasonable. Affliction opens the ear to discipline. Our comforting others must be seasonable; "a word spoken in due season, how good is it?"(2) Duties of religion that relate to God must be performed in their season. To read at home, when the word is a preaching, or the sacrament celebrating, is unseasonable, nay, sinful; as Hushai said, "the counsel is not good at this time": one duty is to prepare for another, but not to jostle out another; fruit must put forth seasonably. Let all the trees of righteousness bring forth season able fruit; in prosperity be thankful, in adversity patient. I. It shows us who is a Christian in God's calendar, namely, the fruit-bearing Christian. As soon as the sap of grace is infused, it puts forth itself in evangelical fruit. II. Here is an indictment against three sorts. 1. Such as bring forth no fruit; "Israel is an empty vine." O how many unfruitful hearers are there, who evaporate into nothing but froth and fume, being like those ears which run out all into straw I they give God neither the early fruit nor the latter. To the unfruitful Christian let me say four things.(1) Unfruitfulness is a shame: barrenness of old was counted a great shame.(2) What account can the unfruitful Christian give to God?(3) They that do not bring forth good fruit, shall never taste of the fruits that grow in heaven. 2. It reproves such as bring forth evil fruit. 3. It reproves such as bring forth good fruit, but to a bad end; "Israel is an empty vine, he bringeth forth fruit unto himself": a man had as good bring forth no fruit, as bring forth fruit unto himself. What is it for one to bring forth fruit unto himself? Prayer is good; but when a man prays only to showy his parts, this is to bring forth fruit unto himself. Works of mercy are good, but when a man gives alms, not so much to feed the poor, as to feed his pride, now he brings forth fruit to himself, and this fruit is worm eaten. III. 1. Let this exhort all to fruitfulness.(1) Fruit is that which God expects from us, we are His plantations; and, "who planteth a vineyard, and eateth not of the fruit thereof?"(2) Fruitfulness is one of the most distinctive characters of a Christian; "the root of the righteous yieldeth fruit." But may not hypocrites bring forth fruit?(a) They do not bring forth fruit in the Vine they bring forth in the strength of parts, not in the strength of Christ.(b) Hypocrites bring forth something like fruit, but it is not the right fruit. The fruit they bear is not sweet.(3) Fruitfulness adorns a Christian; the fruit adorns the tree; a fruit-bearing Christian is an ornament to religion; the more fruitful the branch is, the more fair to look on. A dead tree, as it is unserviceable, so it is uncomely. A Christian, decked with the fruits of righteousness, is beautiful and glorious.(4) Fruitfulness is a good evidence to show for heaven; the fruits of love, humility, good works, are, as St. Bernard saith, seeds of hope, signs of predestination, the. happy presages of future glory. The righteousness of faith is always accompanied with the fruits of righteousness. He that can show good fruit, goes full sail to heaven. 2. It exhorts them that do bear fruit, that they would bring forth more fruit; do not think you have fruit enough, but bring forth further degrees of sanctity; "every branch that beareth fruit, he pruneth it, that it may bring forth more fruit."(1) This is the end why we have new cost laid out upon us, that we should bring forth more fruit.(2) The fuller we are of fruit, the more we are like Christ, who was "full of grace and truth." He received the Spirit without measure.(3) Bearing much fruit will usher in abundance of comfort into the soul in these two exigencies. Store of fruit will give comfort in the hour of death: a little trace will make us above the fear of death. O what joy will it be on the deathbed, when a Christian can bring his sheaves full of corn! when he can show his five talents that he hath gained by trading! when there is not only a drop or two of oil, but his lamp full of oil! what though the devil show God our debts, if we can show Him our fruit?(4) The more your fruit is increased, the more your glory is increased; he whose pound gained ten, was made ruler over ten cities. IV. The last use is of direction. I shall lay down some means to fruitfulness. 1. Be sensible of unfruitfulness. 2. If you would be fruitful, remove those things which will hinder fruitfulness. Cherishing any secret lust in the heart; sin lived in, is like vermin to the tree, which destroys the fruit; grace cannot thrive in a sinful heart. 3. The third means to fruitfulness is weeping for sin. Moisture helps germination in trees; holy tears do water the trees of God, and make them more fruitful. 4. If you would be fruitful often apply the blood of Christ, and the promises.(1) Apply the blood of Christ. Naturalists say, that blood applied to the root of some trees makes them bear better. Sure I am, the blood of Christ applied to the heart, makes it flourish more in holiness.(2) Apply the promises. 5. Another means to fruitfulness is humility. The low grounds are most fruitful: "the valleys are covered with corn"; the humble heart is the fruitful heart. 6. If you would be fruitful in grace, be much in good conference; "then they that. feared the Lord spake often one to another." 7. If you would be fruit-bearing trees, be near the water of the sanctuary; "he shall be like a tree planted by the waters, and that spreadeth out the roots by the river; her leaf shall be green, nor shall it cease from yielding fruit." 8. And lastly, if you would fructify apace, go, to God and desire Him to make you fruitful; God is called the Husbandman, and He hath an art above all other husbandmen; they can plant and prune trees, but if they be dead they cannot make them bear. (T. Watson.)
I. TRANSPARENT. This a true minister's — 1. Duty. 2. Desire. 3. Privilege. II. FAMILIAR TO THE CHURCH. This — 1. Demanded by their community of interest. 2. Necessary to the growth of their mutual sympathy. 3. His vindication against false rumours and slander. 4. Should ever bring glory to God. 5. Ought to be cultivated, intelligent, and loving. (G. G. Ballard.)
1. His imprisonment gave notoriety to the cause for which he was imprisoned. 2. His own soldier guards heard him talk to his visitors, and themselves became the means of extending the cause. As one man relieved another day after day, the whole of the imperial guard was brought under Christian teaching. 3. These guards would make this strange prisoner the theme of many homes in the city. 4. The apostle's calmness and consistency began to tell on the Christians themselves.(1) The Gentile Christians in sympathy with the liberal views of the apostle plucked up heart of grace.(2) The Jewish Christians envious of the apostle's influence doubled their zeal. II. THE UNVEILING OF THE APOSTLE'S HEART THROUGH THE SPREAD OF THE GOSPEL. We see — 1. His perfect self-forgetfulness. Neither his imprisonment nor the preaching of envy and strife could disturb his confidence in Christ. 2. His large and hopeful charity. Even the Judaizers preached Christ. 3. His spirit of humble and trustful dependence — (1) (2) 4. His thorough and absorbing devotedness to his work. Conclusion:Note — 1. The power of personal influence. 2. That this influence can, only be sustained by personal union with Christ. (J. J. Goadby.)
I. The first result of God's gracious intervention to make the wrath of man praise Him was that THE CAUSE OF PAUL'S IMPRISONMENT BECAME EXTENSIVELY KNOWN. 1. His bonds were "well known as being in connection with Christ." This was no doubt the form in which the cause of his imprisonment would present itself; yet the full and precious force of She "in Christ" is to be held fast here. It was through his union with Christ —(1) That the bonds were on his limbs — badges, therefore, not of slavery but of freedom.(2) That he was prompted by the Spirit of Christ to earnest effort.(3) That he was sustained by grace to bear his bonds with patience and make them instruments for glorifying God. 2. This was known among the Praetorian guards. He had no privacy day or night, and seeing his purity, patience, gentleness, and kindness, they soon saw that he was no criminal, and felt that his bonds were in Christ. 3. In all other places, to all who knew anything about His imprisonment. II. The second result was that PAUL'S EXAMPLE BECAME STIMULATING. 1. We may infer that in the early Church every member according to his opportunities spoke the word of the Lord. "Most" of the members of the Roman Church were certainly evangelists. The discoverer of a remedy is bound by humanity to make the remedy known: so surely should he who knows of the Divine physician. In heathen countries evangelism is the immediate fruit of conversion; but also many professing Christians never speak a word for Christ. 2. The observation of the apostle's endurance of suffering strengthened the faith of the Church, and spurred them to increased effort. Thus it comes that the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church. This was the effect of the death of Stephen; of the persecution of the Waldenses and of the Malagasy. 3. The secret of this is told in the little phrase "in the Lord." The man out of Christ can see only the chains and the possibilities of death: the man who is "in Christ" sees also —(1) The spiritual grandeur of work such as had brought the apostle to bonds.(2) The grandeur of suffering for Christ.(3) The sympathy of Christ with the sufferer.(4) The growth of religious strength and beauty through the affliction. 4. The preachers were under the influence of strangely divergent motives, but the apostle rejoiced that, however, perfectly or imperfectly, Christ was preached by all. (R. Johnstone, LL. B.)
II. PAUL'S JOYS. The progress of the gospel — the love, courage, and confidence of the brethren — the proclamation of Christ. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
II. THE SECOND RESULT WAS THAT IT MADE THOSE WHO WERE ALREADY RELIEVERS INCREASINGLY BOLD OF SPEECH. If he could preach in fetters much more should they preach in freedom. But there is a dark shadow on the picture, Christ was preached from varying motives. Yet the apostle will rejoice that He is preached at all. In the Epistle to the Galatians the preachers of Christ of envy and strife were unsparingly denounced; but here he is not comparing party with party, but Christianity with heathenism. Even an imperfect gospel was precious in view of the nameless corruptions of Rome. The same experience is seen still in mission fields, all minor differences of Church organization and creed dwindle into nothingness in the presence of the hideous corruption of the pagan world. So ought it to be in Christian lands in view of home heathenism. (J. Hutchinson, D. D.)
II. THE EXPERIENCE OF ALL BELIEVERS. Nothing happens by chance — all things are overruled by Christ — we should therefore gladly toil and suffer in His cause. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
I. There can be no doubt that St. Paul here REFERS TO THAT IMPRISONMENT WITH WHICH THE BOOK OF THE ACTS CLOSES. Regard this event — 1. Under the purely human aspect. Three times in his life was St. Paul, as he gloried in saying, "a prisoner of Jesus Christ," besides "bonds oft." The first was at Caesarea, when he pleaded his own and his Master's cause, and claimed the right of a Roman citizen to appeal unto Caesar. In this he gratified one of the deepest desires of his heart. "I must see Rome." It was his holy ambition to carry the gospel to the centre of the world. The Lord ratified the desire of his heart. "As thou hast testified of Me in Jerusalem, so shalt thou bear witness in Rome." But His Master had not indicated that He was to go bound. Apostles, like ourselves, must wait for the unfoldings of providence. He reached Rome and was subjected to mild restraint. During two years he was kept in suspense: then he seems to have been dismissed, but returned again after a few years' mission to the West, to the same place, and was beheaded. All this is what he meant by the "things that concern me." As to those details we should have been so glad to receive, about himself and the Roman Church, he is silent, perhaps because his letters were closely watched. 2. When he lays the stress on "have fallen out rather," he gives us a hint of another side of the matter. The hand of God had been leading him in a way he knew not. It was not Paul alone who had appealed unto Caesar, but Christ in him and Christ's cause. It was part of the manifold wisdom of God that he should consolidate the Church in Rome. St. Paul's special revelation of truth — "my gospel" — was necessary to the perfection of evangelical teaching, and therefore was he, not Peter, sent to Rome. II. RATHER UNTO THE FURTHERENCE OF THE GOSPEL. The apostle's imprisonment had positively tended to promote the kingdom of Christ. 1. Generally this had been the case. Paul was still the centre of the European gospel, and had time and opportunity now for a calm survey of the whole estate of Christ's Church. His spirit was surrendered to the undisturbed influence of meditation and prayer. What the three great Epistles — Ephesians, Colossians, and Philippians — owe to this seclusion, those who study them may conjecture. Certain it is they have tended greatly to the furtherence of the gospel. 2. More particularly his bonds have promoted the gospel —(1) By being made known through Rome in their connection with the Redeemer. He was known, marked, inquired about as the most eminent representative of Christianity to the army and to great numbers who assembled in his own hired house.(2) By their effect in stimulating others to preach Christ.(a) The first class of these preachers are described as feeling the good influence of the apostle's bonds in two ways: first they were inspired with boldness by his Christian endurance; secondly, their love to the cause of Christ was increased by their sympathy with his devotion as set for the defence of the gospel.(b) But these bonds stirred up a different class of preachers; the weak brethren of whom he speaks as exerting so much influence in Rome (Romans 14). Weak in faith and scrupulosity, but strong in prejudice and bitterness, who thought that by preaching a more contracted gospel, they would add bitterness to his bonds. As a confederate company they were actuated by "strife" and "faction"; being only in a minority, they sought to increase their numbers and raise a party that would neutralize this Gentile gospel. 3. By a remarkable expression St. Paul declares his self-forgetting concentration of heart on the furtherance of Christ's gospel (ver. 18).(1) The exclamation, "What then," shows that he has something to say which demands, as it were, an apology to himself and others; but he boldly goes on to give the ground of his rejoicing and his condemnation of every impure motive in the preaching of Christ.(2) This rejoicing is —(a) His pure and loyal exultation that by all means the name of Christ was more widely proclaimed.(b) His gladness that what was mingled with so much private disquietude would issue in the furtherance of his own salvation. Fidelity to public duty must go hand in hand with trembling solicity for individual fidelity.(c) To what did he look for personal assurance and establishment in grace? Not to any guaranteed apostolical prerogative; not to the long-disciplined, strength of his moral nature; but to the common heritage of all Christians — "the supply of Christ's Spirit" through the prayers of his fellow saints united with his own. (W. B. Pope, D. D.)
II. III. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
I. GOD'S PROVIDENCE IS NOT TO BE INTERPRETED IN FRAGMENTS. II. THE MORAL IS HIGHER THAN THE PERSONAL. Paul is in prison; the gospel is free. III. THE BONDS OF ONE MAN MAY GIVE INSPIRATION TO THE LIBERTY OF ANOTHER (ver. 14). IV. THE SPREAD OF THE GOSPEL DEPENDS UPON NO ONE MAN. V. EVEN THE AFFLICTED HAVE A MISSION. (J. Parker, D. D.)
II. ARE THE PROMISE OF FUTURE GLORY. III. ARE MORE HONOURABLE THAN AN IMPERIAL CROWN, for — 1. They are worn in the service of the King of kings. 2. Worn in royal spirit. 3. Made the means of confirming others. 4. Overruled for the extension of the kingdom. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
II. HIS SELF DEVOTION TO CHRIST. III. HIS REAL DIGNITY. The omen of civil degradation was the sign of his relationship with the Lord of the universe. IV. HIS MORAL FREEDOM. (G. G. Ballard.)
1. Popular tumult in Jerusalem. 2. Apprehension by Lysias, bound and ordered to be examined by scourging. 3. Placed at the bar of the Sanhedrim and ordered to be smitten on the mouth by the High Priest. 4. Conspiracy against his life, exposed, defeated. 5. Taken prisoner to Caesarea. Tried before Felix. Then before Festus, afterwards before Agrippa and Berenice. 6. Appeals to Caesar, shipwrecked, arrives at Rome. 7. In Rome delivered to the captain of the guard, permitted to dwell by himself with a soldier that kept him (Acts 28:30-31) for two years. II. HAVE FALLEN OUT RATHER UNTO THE FURTHERANCE OF THE GOSPEL. The development of events in a consecrated life — 1. Is the work of an overruling Providence. 2. Produces startling results, disappointing alike to the hopes of enemies and the fears of friends. 3. Whatever may be its starting point, attains its end in the advancement of the gospel. 4. Illustrates how moral principles when tried in suffering become mighty forces in the world's evangelization. 5. A pledge that suffering with Christ shall be followed by a fellowship of glory. (G. G. Ballard.)
II. HOW COMES THIS TO PASS? Not by the intentions of enemies, nor the virtue of the saints' sufferings. 1. By the power of Christ (Psalm 2:1). 2. When men see the saints' undauntedness, their patience, the power of God strengthening them, and their triumph over death, their very example brings many into the Church. 3. The Word of God is not bound, though the preacher may be (2 Timothy 2:9). III. THE USE. 1. To be comforted in all our troubles which the wicked raise up against us, if the gospel is advanced thereby. 2. To condemn the faintness and backsliding of many in troubles (Luke 14:26-27). 3. Not to doubt of the truth or dislike professors when they are persecuted. (H. Airay, D. D.)
II. INCREASES upon the approach of persecution. III. NECESSARY to true witness bearing. (G. G. Ballard.)
I. THE AMOUNT OF LIBERTY GRANTED HIM. For some unknown reason, instead of being shut up within the Praetorian barracks, he was permitted to dwell in a hired lodging of his own, and "receive all who might come to him." He was not forbidden to preach to his visitors, and many would go away deeply impressed. II. THE ADDITIONAL EFFICACY GIVEN TO HIS PREACHING BY HIS BONDS. He was kept under strict guard, being chained to a Roman soldier. It might have been thought that had he been allowed to go unfettered he might have accomplished more. But the fact of his bondage drew multitudes who might otherwise not have heard him, and his chains were a token of his sincerity. It became manifest that his bonds were in Christ and that he was not afraid of imprisonment or death. Onesimus was but one of many begotten by his bonds. III. INTO WHAT UNEXPECTED QUARTERS HIS INFLUENCE PENETRATED. Had a Roman Christian previous to Paul's coming been asked what section of the population would be the last to feel the power of the gospel he would probably have pointed to the rude, hardened soldiers who were in attendance on Nero. But Paul comes and lo! the praetorium is one of the first places to feel his influence. IV. HOW HIS IMPRISONMENT INFLUENCED MANY OF THOSE WHO WERE ALREADY PREACHING THE GOSPEL. We might have thought that the sight of Paul's chains would depress. Instead of this it quickened their zeal. Let us learn a lesson of hope in God. 1. For the progress of His kingdom. 2. For our own welfare. (T. C. Finlayson.)
I. UNDER THE MOST DISADVANTAGEOUS CIRCUMSTANCES — in bonds. II. WITH A VERY LIMITED OPPORTUNITY — one soldier daily. III. UPON A CLASS OF MIND AND HEART NOT EASILY IMPRESSED, viz., the guard which had charge of him, a prisoner. IV. THROUGHOUT THE CITY — notwithstanding the restraints of "his own hired house." V. REACHING THE FURTHER FIELD, by first fully cultivating the one at hand. (G. G. Ballard.)
(J. Hutchinson, D. D.)
(J. F. B. Tinling, B. A.)
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
(John Bunyan, in Bedford Jail.)
(Bishop Lightfoot.)Who could see without emotion that venerable form subjected by iron links to the coarse control of the soldier who stood beside him? How often must the tears of the assembly have been called forth by the upraising of that fettered hand, and the clanking of the chain which checked its energetic action. (Conybeare and Howson.)
(J. Daille.)
II. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
II. III. (J. Lyth, D. D.)The text suggests — I. DIVERSE DEVELOPEMENT OF HUMAN DISPOSITION. II. THE POSSIBILITY OF DOING A GOOD DEED THROUGH A BAD MOTIVE. III. THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF ENTIRELY CONCEALING MOTIVES. IV. THE ACTION OF SELF-SEEKERS TURNED INTO THE GOOD MAN'S SOURCE OF JOY. V. MAN IS NEVER SO DIABOLIZED AS WHEN MAKING A GOOD CAUSE THE MEANS OF GRIEVING AND TORMENTING THE CHURCH. VI. THE MERE FACT THAT A MAN PREACHES CHRIST IS NOT A PROOF OF HIS PERSONAL SALVATION: and if this can be affirmed of preaching, how much more may it be affirmed of learning. (J. Parker, D. D.)
II. (J. Parker, D. D.)
1. Both adopt the Christian name. 2. Both utter the same shibboleth. 3. Both are active in preaching Christ. II. WHERE THEY DIFFER. 1. In heart. "Contention" moves the one; "love" reigns in the other. 2. In spirit. "Envy and strife" move the one; "goodwill" actuates the other. 3. In source of strength. Love of party animates the one; confidence in the Lord emboldens the other. 4. In aim. That of the one is to advance, it may be, a lifeless Church; that of the other to propel the gospel of Christ. 5. The depth and accuracy of conviction. The one "supposing to rid," etc. (ver. 16); the other "knowing that," etc. (ver. 17). (G. G. Ballard.)
1. An imperfect apprehension of Christ's mission. 2. A total absence of Christ's Spirit. 3. Thought and sympathy, narrowed by early prejudice and preconceived ideas. 4. Christ made subservient to the doctrines, ritual, and history of a system. II. THE RESULTS INSEPARABLE FROM IT. 1. The cross degraded into a rallying point for party strife. 2. The basest spirit indulged under the pretence of fulfilling a sacred office. (1) (2) 4. Zeal for propagating a creed, greater than to save a lost world. III. THE GERM OF IT. 1. May exist in those who zealously preach Christ. 2. Consists in a moral contradiction between the heart of the preacher and the theme of his discourse — contentiousness and Christ. 3. Produces impurity of motive in Christian work — "not sincerely." 4. Biases the judgment to expect results which are never realized — "supposing." 5. Inspires aims which are unchristian — "to add affliction." (G. G. Ballard.)
II. THE MOTIVE. Sometimes impure; as sectarian, mercenary, ambitious — sometimes sincere; from love to God and man. III. THE RESULT. Some good every way — Christ is exalted — the faithful rejoice, (J. Lyth, D. D.) I. THE PREACHING OF CHRIST. No preaching can bear this designation which does not constitute Him the grand object of it. From the first the holy men who spoke as they were moved by the Holy Spirit pointed to Him. All the Scriptures lead, remotely, perhaps, but certainly, to the Cross of Christ. He is to be preached as the only object of faith, and the sole source of salvation. Opposition must not hinder, nor heresy divert this. II. THE SCALE ON WHICH CHRIST IS TO BE PREACHED. 1. To all peoples — Philippians and Romans, Europeans and Africans. 2. By men of all views and denominations, Jewish and Gentile Christians; Roman Catholics and Protestants; Anglicans and Dissenters, etc. III. THE SPIRIT IN WHICH THIS SHOULD BE RECEIVED. There are two classes interested. 1. Ministers should rejoice when they see the gospel spreading on all sides and among all denominations. Let it not be said of them, "Ye know not what spirit ye are off." No jealous or envious feeling at others' successes should be cherished by them. 2. Congregations while loyal to their own Church should put a generous construction on the work of others. IV. THE GLORIOUS RESULTS ARISING OUT OF THIS. 1. In time. 2. In eternity. (W. B. Collyer, D. D.)
1. Negatively.(1) Toleration is not an enforced forbearance with men who teach error. Some keep their hands off errorists because they cannot touch them; like boys who will not pluck ripe fruit because there is a high wall in the way.(2) Nor is it a recognition of the right of men to freedom of thought and experience, which is only part of it.(3) Still less is it indifference to error. There are men who do not care whether you teach God or Jupiter, heathen mythology or Christian theology. 2. Positively. It is a generous confidence in the vitality of truth and its ultimate victory, born of hope, nursed by courage, adopted by love. II. IF PAUL'S SPIRIT BE RIGHT THEN WE NEED TO AMEND OUR VIEW OF SOCIAL AND MORAL RESPONSIBILITY. He saw bad men taking his place yet he let them go on, rejoiced in their work, though not in the motive of it. Had he lived in our day he would have been told, "You cannot afford to sit in a Church where these men teach or you will be responsible for their teaching." He would have replied, "Who made you a judge; to their own master they stand or fall." Every man is responsible for bin own conduct and belief to God. If I please to work with men who are heretical on some points of theology, but who are right in the point in which I work with them (Unitarian temperance reformers, e.g.), I am not responsible for their wrong beliefs, but only for that part which I take. Paul was grieved at the amount of error that was in these men, but the small amount of truth he saw pleased him more. III. THIS CHRISTIAN TOLERATION FOUNDED IN FAITH AND LOVE, LEADS TO THE REAL AND ONLY REAL UNION POSSIBLE TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. External formulas are not unimportant, but there never will be Christian union in this world until men feel that the invisible, spiritual elements of truth, the interior experience of soul, are transcendently more important than the idea forms, or the government forms, or the worship forms of the Church. Humanity is our common bond outside; why should not Christianity be within? "Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind. (H. W. Beecher.)
II. IT IS KEEN IN PERCEIVING, EVEN IN CHAINS, THE WILL OF GOD. "Knowing that I am set." III. IT IS QUICK IN COOPERATING TO ACCOMPLISH THE WILL OF GOD WHEN KNOWN. IV. IT BINDS THE HEART IN SYMPATHY TO ALL WHO SUFFER IN THE DEFENCE OF THE GOSPEL. V. IT IS THE MIGHTIEST FORCE THAT MEN CAN WIELD FOR THE GOSPEL'S TRIUMPH. (G. G. Ballard.)
1. The exhibition of Jesus as the Messiah sent to save a guilty world."(1) Such a messenger had been set forth by prophecy and types from the beginning.(2) He was exhibited as truly human, sinless, Divine. 2. The publication of His great work, and ultimate design in visiting this world. (1) (2) 3. The assertion of His claims on all mankind. (1) (2) II. GLORIOUS AS THIS THEME IS, YET MANY PREACH IT FROM CORRUPT MOTIVES. 1. Some for gain — money, position, influence. 2. Some for victory in a controversial battle. 3. Yet if Christ is really preached, whatever may be the condemnation of the preacher, Christ's end will he secured. III. THE REASONS WHY THE PREACHING OF CHRIST, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES, IS A JUST OCCASION FOR HOLY JOY. 1. By this means the enemies of Christ are made to bear unequivocal testimony to His dignity and glory, and to promote the interests of truth without intending it: as the heathen writers quoted by Paul, and the devils' confession of Christ. 2. As the world can only be renovated by the preaching of Christ, so even His enemies who preach Him contribute to this event. Think of the heathen world; the acceptance of Christ in any sense and from any hands cannot but better it. 3. We may be assured that God will certainly overrule the preaching of Christ, even by wicked men, to accomplish His purpose of mercy. In much inferior matters God controls the movements of bad men for His own glory. He did so in the case of Judas. Is it not then correct to argue that if God sub ordinates the malignity, ambition, and haughtiness of men to the accomplishment of His providential purposes, He will also overrule them to serve His designs of mercy? Witness the Reformation under Henry VIII.Application: 1. Our cause for rejoicing is exceedingly great. Notwithstanding there are many parts where the gospel is imperfectly preached, yet there are thousands of holy men who preach Christ from the purest motives. 2. Let us manifest our gratitude to Him who is preached by a more lively zeal in His cause. 3. Let us who love Christ draw into closer union with one another. If we allow bickering and strife while Christ's cause may prosper we shall be ruined. 4. Let the despondent be encouraged — anyhow Christ is preached. The gospel is advancing in spite of our fears. (Isaac Mann, M. A.)
(Lord Bacon.)
1. The apostle had, by nature, a temper that could not bear very much being abused. He was naturally sensitive and aggressive. In prison and helpless no doubt there were slight heavings of the old volcano at the conduct of his opponents. Moreover his conscience was an inspired one, and he must have felt, "Who is a judge of orthodoxy if I am not?" Did he then rouse the alarm and denounce these preachers of envy and strife? No, he rejoiced where few could have rejoiced, viz., in prison, and at what few could have rejoiced, viz., that his enemies were doing good. 2. Paul might have felt that his life was thrown away, that God had need of him. Many feel that everything must be done, and that there is none to do it hut themselves. Paul had a right to feel so if any man had. But the thought never seems to have occurred to him. No doubt he felt the cowardliness and the cruelty of these men, but the feeling was swallowed up in the reflection that they were doing his work when he could not do it himself. 3. Paul held that so precious is this truth of Jesus that no man can present even a particle of it that is not worth presenting. You cannot preach Christ so that it is not worth while to have preached Him thus. It is better that He should be preached by bad men for bad purposes than not preached at all. 4. It would have been enough in Paul to have said less than he did, such as "I trust all will be for the best. I hope it will do some good, but I fear it will do much harm. Of course I cannot associate with them." On the contrary he exults over the certain good of the issue. The hounds of love are better than the hounds of theology to hunt heretics with. How painful not to know the difference between conscience and combativeness. 5. Consider in a few deductions the temptations to which men who are working for religious ends are liable. I. THE DANGER OF SUBSTITUTING ACTIVITY FOR THE LOVING GRACES. The bee that goes buzzing about the flowers in the spring is very useful; but, after all, I think the flowers, that never stir or buzz, are full as interesting and far more important. The buzzing bee gets a good deal of honey, but he would not get a particle if it were not for the silent flowers which contain it all. There is a great peril of an external rattling activity leaving the heart cold, mechanical, and even malevolent. II. THE DANGER OF ARROGANCE. 1. There are a great many people who say that all Churches must be constituted, work, and believe as their own. 2. Many of us have got beyond that, but how many of us can rejoice in the Church whose services has swallowed up ours. But all that Paul wanted was that work should be done, whoever did it; and even rejoiced that others would have the credit for the work he did. Conclusion: From the beginning until today the power of preaching has been and henceforth mill be, not in ideas but in disposition. (H. W. Beecher.)
II. It may be that envy had inspired them with the thought, that BY LABOURING IN PREACHING THE GOSPEL THEY SHOULD OBTAIN A PART OF THE APOSTLE'S GLORY, and that by making good use of the time of his imprisonment, to establish themselves in the minds of the disciples, they should by degrees take away the credit and authority which he possessed; and judging of him by themselves, they imagined that it would be an immense increase to his affliction to see them thus enriched and decorated with his spoils. Such or such like were the thoughts of these wretched men. Judge by this what is the nature of vice, and how horrible its impudence in daring thus to profane the most sacred things, and to abuse them so vilely for, its own ungodly purpose. Thus Satan sometimes clothes himself as an angel of light to further the works of darkness. From which you see that it is not enough that Our actions be good and praiseworthy, if our intentions are not pure and upright. It is to profane the good to do it with a bad end in view. 2. See how the thoughts of vice are not only impudent, but even foolish and vain. These deceivers, judging of St. Paul by themselves, believed that their preaching would vex him. Poor creatures! how little you knew of this high-minded man, to imagine that so small a thing could trouble him! (J. Daille.)
(Boree.)
I. Because thereby THE RENOVATION OF FALLEN MAN IS INTELLIGENTLY PROPOSED. 1. High time, by common consent, something was done in that direction, and many are the projects suggested for it. (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) 2. Can you look at these laudable secondary considerations without marking their fatal defect? They deal with man externally and say not a word about his internal renovation. If you leave a man's heart untouched there is that there which will laugh all your culture to scorn. If his heart be right all will be right, but not otherwise. 3. The gospel aims at making the heart right, and succeeds wherever it is accepted. II. Because thereby THE RENOVATION IS GRACIOUSLY GUARANTEED. 1. With the preaching of Christ God has formally connected the exertion of His power. "With God all things are possible." The preacher is a fellow worker with God. 2. With this preaching God has been pleased to associate the accomplishment of His purposes. 3. He has identified with preaching the manifestation of His sympathies. (W. Brock, D. D.)
1. The spirit characteristic of all God's will towards men. 2. The spirit manifested by His Son. 3. The spirit of the gospel message. II. IT IS YIELDED TO AN HONOURED BROTHER. 1. To him as a man — his character, aims, and life. 2. To his labours in the cause of Christ. 3. To his future success. (G. G. Ballard.)
II. IS IMPERATIVE upon its professors, whether ministers or people. III. MUST BE MAINTAINED IN LOVE to the truth, its advocates, and even its opponents. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
II. III. IV. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
(Professor Eadie.)
(H. W. Beecher.)
(H. W. Beecher.)
(Oliver Cromwell.)
(Anstera.)
(William Arnot.)
(Bp. Ryle.)
II. THE GROUND OF THIS CONFIDENCE. "This shall turn," viz., the preaching of Christ. His joy does not arise from the fact that certain persons preached, but from the higher fact that Christ was preached; not that bad men were working, but that a good work was being done. III. THE EXTENSION OF THE TRUTH IS THE BEST GUARANTEE OF PERSONAL HAPPINESS. A man of less moral grandeur would have started the argument from himself. Let me be free and then the gospel shall triumph; but he knew nothing of such self-idolatry. He said Christ shall be preached, and Christ's servants in due time shall be free. When it goes well with the Master it goes well with the servant. IV. THE GOSPEL HAS EVERYTHING TO HOPE FROM BEING ALLOWED TO REVEAL ITS OWN CREDENTIALS. Proclaim it — ministers, teachers; it sounds well from any lips — philosophers, babes and sucklings, unlearned. By whomsoever pronounced, the celestial fire will strike through every syllable. V. THE GREATEST MAN IN THE CHURCH MAY BE SERVED BY THE SUPPLICATION OF THE GOOD. The apostle associates his salvation with the prayer of the Philippians. No man is so far advanced as to be beyond the range of prayer. Here a child is of value. (J. Parker, D. D.)
II. ALL GOD'S PROVIDENTIAL DEALINGS WITH HIS PEOPLE ARE INTENDED TO BE A TRAINING FOR SALVATION, whether pleasant or like Paul's at Rome, "not joyous but grievous," a discipline fitted to ripen the flower of holy character, which will be fully opened in its glorious beauty in heaven. III. BY THE MEASURE IN WHICH WE AVAIL OURSELVES OF THIS TRAINING OUR SALVATION WILL BE AFFECTED. 1. All who reach heaven will be perfectly happy up to the full measure of their capacities, because being "pure in heart," they will "see God" as fully as their natures can see Him. 2. But the eyes of those who availed themselves but little of the light, of truth, who looked at God but seldom, will be able to look at Him only from far; whilst those whose eyes have been much accustomed to the light here, will stand in the foremost circles, and there with ravished hearts gaze on the infinite glory. Some will have an abundant entrance, while others will be saved only as "through fire." IV. Remembering these things, WHAT MANNER OF PERSONS OUGHT WE TO BE. 1. In all holy conversation and godliness. 2. In prayer and effort. 3. So that the Divine training may" turn to our salvation." V. HOW THEN SHALL WE OBTAIN THIS SPIRITUAL PROFIT? 1. Through the supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ.(1) He originates and supports spiritual life; clears away the mists of prejudice; opens the eyes to guilty self and merciful God; dwells in the regenerate.(2) The figures under which His influence is set forth describe His action; "fire" to burn up the chaff within us, and to light up in our souls the genial flame of love; water to cleanse pollution and to quench thirst; unction to consecrate. 2. This supply is obtained largely through the Church's prayer. (R. Johnstone, LL. B.)
II. THE PRAYER. He relies on the Philippians' intercessions, answering to those he always offered for them (ver. 4). It is simply His most graceful way of asking them to pray for him — not, simply with reference to the official work of the gospel, but to the good of his own soul. Mutual prayer is bound up with the very essence of the Christian system. III. THE CONNECTION BETWEEN THE TWO. He seems to place himself between them and his Lord. The Spirit of Jesus flows unto him in proportion as the prayers of his fellow Christians and his own flow out towards Him in supplication. We are what the supply of the Saviour's Spirit makes us; that is the measure of our life, strength, perception of truth, performance of duty, and attainment in grace. But that is dependent on individual and common prayer; and the prayer for the Spirit is offered through the same Spirit in whom as well as for whom we pray. (W. B. Pope, D. D.)
1. In reference to Paul.(1) He expected to be prayed for. He does not ask for, but assumes that he has their prayers. Would that all pastors could assume as much. Some are rich in this, but some terribly poor.(2) He valued the prayers of the saints. He was an apostle, but could not do without them; how much more we.(3) He looked for great results from them. He wanted them all the more because his troubles were heavier than usual; so do ministers in these evil days. 2. In reference particularly to ministers.(1) They may justly claim the prayers of their brethren. (a) (b) (c) |