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In Philippians chapter 4 beginning
at verse 14, yet it was kind of you to share my trouble. You
Philippians yourselves know that in the beginning of the gospel
when I left Macedonia, no church entered into partnership with
me in the giving and receiving except you only. Even in Thessalonica,
you sent help for my needs once and again. Not that I seek a
gift, but I seek the fruit that increases to your credit. I have
received full payment and more, and I am well supplied, having
received from Epaphroditus the gifts you sent. a fragrant offering,
a sacrifice acceptable and pleasing to God, and my God will supply
every need of yours according to his riches in glory in Christ
Jesus. To our God and Father be glory
forever and ever. Amen. This is the word of the
Lord. And you can be seated. If you noticed how this paragraph
began, yet it was kind of you to share in my trouble. It's
interesting that in our various versions you will find often
a start of a new paragraph here. But it begins with a coordinating
conjunction that's translated yet in the scripture. And that
clues us into the fact that the Apostle Paul is clearly continuing
his thought. He hasn't left it. He's coming
to it. One thing to always remember
is that your paragraphs, your chapters and verses as they are
numbered, these are not inspired. They were not in the original
manuscripts. Those were added later. And so always keep in
mind that we should be reading in context, don't necessarily
stop where there is a change in paragraph, continue on. And
so yet it was kind of you to share in my trouble. So the apostle
is commending these saints for sharing in his ministry as they
had done from the moment they first heard the gospel. But what
a strange way to put it. It was kind of you to share in
my trouble. If you recall, it seems that
this congregation was very concerned about Paul's plight and the effect
that his current condition might have on his ministry. So in chapter
one, it's been a while since we've been there, but in chapter
one, we find Paul reassuring them that despite his present
circumstances, the gospel isn't being hindered, it's advancing.
But here, he says, they're sharing in his trouble, not his triumph.
So if the gospel is advancing, wouldn't it be this kind of you
to share in my triumph of this advance of the gospel? But you
see, this is how Paul characterizes his ministry throughout scripture. And if you'll recall that bold
assertion that ends this previous paragraph, I can do all things
through Christ who strengthens me. And so Paul is speaking as
a victorious and triumphant minister of God. So which is it? Is it
a victory or is it a trial? It's both, right? In Christ,
Paul is triumphant, but it is triumph in the trouble. It is
triumph through the trouble. It is triumph despite the trouble. It is not triumph instead of
trouble. Trouble dogged the Apostle Paul
throughout his earthly ministry. But thanks be to God, it didn't
stop him. No matter what trouble was hurled at him, no matter
what obstacle was deployed in his path, he kept on running
his race. He kept on pressing toward that
mark of a high calling of God in Christ, and he did so with
a rejoicing heart. He kept his eyes on the prize. And so what we see in this passage
is an amazing marriage of ideas in the preceding paragraph being
continued in this paragraph as well. Previously, we saw that
the apostle rejoiced greatly in the Lord upon receiving this
gift from the Philippian saints, but nonetheless, he goes to great
lengths to make it clear that he was content before that gift
arrived. And he would have remained content,
he says, with or without the gift. The gift was irrelevant. He had learned the secret of
being content, of being satisfied wherever he was, whether he was
being humbled or whether he was being esteemed, whether he was
full or whether he was hungry, whether he had plenty or whether
he lacked what we consider to be the essentials. He had the
strength for every situation through the power of Christ that
enabled him. So think of Paul's situation
as he writes this letter. He's taken pen in hand in a Roman
prison, chained to an imperial guard. And since prisoners were
given the barest of provisions, if they were given any provisions
at all, it's clear that the Apostle Paul could use some help. But
this wasn't Paul's first rodeo. His whole ministry had been characterized
by desperate and perilous situations, any one of which could have easily
sidelined the apostle and silenced his tongue. Beatings, flogging,
stoning, shipwrecks, imprisonments, bandits, conspiring enemies,
starvation, exposure, the list goes on and on, and Paul gives
us that list himself. He had to face all of these things
and more, and he had not only survived, here he is still proclaiming
the gospel, still watching over the churches, undeterred by impossible
situations that he had endured. These were the all things that
he could do through Christ who strengthened him. None of the
troubles in his ministry surprised him. I mean, after all, immediately
following his conversion, he was told up front that he must
suffer much for the name of Christ. So trouble was a constant companion
of Paul's ministry. So what if he's in jail with
little or no provisions? He's been through far worse.
So what if he's constrained by chains? The gospel is unconstrained. The gates of hell cannot withstand
the advance of the kingdom of heaven. And so rather than hinder
the gospel, as Paul says, my current troubles have actually
opened up a whole new field of harvest for the kingdom of God.
Because through his chains, if you recall, the gospel had spread
throughout the entire Praetorian guard, and it had even made its
way into the household of evil Caesar himself. That's triumph. But it wasn't Paul's triumph,
it's Christ's triumph. He's the one giving Paul the
strength to endure all these things. And as Paul had learned
early on, even when he's weak or especially when he's weak,
that's when Christ is strong in him. And the impossible becomes
possible in Christ. And nowhere is this set forth
more succinctly than in 2 Corinthians 4, verses 8 and 9. Paul explains there how he ministers
and other ministers of the gospel are able to fulfill their call
despite the opposition they face and even their own personal human
frailties. Now, of course, it's later on
in that very same epistle where he gives us that catalog, that
list of specific trials and troubles he'd endured. But before he gets
there, he gives them a comprehensive summary. So I want to read that
passage to you. It is in 2 Corinthians chapter
4. You can read it later for yourself. I'm just going to read verses
8 and 9. And this is what the apostle Paul says. We are afflicted
in every way, but not crushed, perplexed, but not driven to
despair, persecuted but not forsaken, struck down but not destroyed. Those are important words the
Apostle Paul is speaking. And so this is what we find in
this particular text. Paul is summarizing the kinds
of troubles he has experienced in his ministry and that all
who truly proclaim the gospel will experience to one degree
or another. And he does so with these contrasting vulnerable
situations over against unexpected outcomes. You know, if you are
afflicted in every way, you don't expect to survive, right? If
you're perplexed, you don't expect to have understanding. You know,
if you're knocked down enough times, eventually you don't get
up, right? I mean, these are the things
that the apostle Paul is saying. And I wanted you to notice something
about this because I read from the English Standard Version,
but that negating conjunction that is translated, but not,
can just as easily be translated, but never. In other words, the
pattern Paul gives is this, but never that. This always, but
never that. And Paul's language is quite
colorful. He is afflicted, he says, in every way, but he is
never crushed. The word afflicted is a broad
term that encompasses all kinds of trials and troubles. It's
the word Jesus used whenever he promised every one of his
followers in this world, you will have tribulation. You will
have affliction. And the word paints a picture
of being hard pressed on every side, being closed in upon in
every way imaginable. It's being squeezed so tightly
that you feel there's no room to breathe. That's pressure. This is what Paul experienced
regularly. And yet, despite that kind of
pressure, he says, never crushed by the heaviness. You might expect,
but I wasn't. There's always a way of escape.
He says that he is perplexed, but never driven to desperation,
never driven to despair. Paul is sometimes baffled by
situations and circumstances. We even see this in the text
itself. He was bewildered that the Galatians were flirting with
legalism, all right? He was perplexed about his thorn
in the flesh, but he was never driven to utter hopelessness. There may be times where, for
a moment, he's at a loss over what he's experiencing, but he
never comes to his wits' ends because God is always there.
And the Lord our God always reminds him, my grace is sufficient for
you. He's persecuted by men, he says, never forsaken. So who is it that never forsakes
us? It is the Lord, right. That's what he means. He is oppressed. He is pursued by his enemies,
but he is never deserted. And this is interesting because
Paul had friends who sometimes deserted him. There was a time
whenever Paul had his companions and he was dispatching them to
different places. He sent Crescens to Galatia,
he sent Titus to Dalmatia, but Demas was to remain with him,
to help him. But he says, Demas, abandon me,
because he was captivated by the allure of this world. And
there's Paul left all alone. But even then, though he was
all alone, he wasn't all alone, was he? Christ is with him. And the Lord who promised to
never leave us nor forsake us was the one strengthening him
through this ordeal. And then finally, Paul says, I may have
been struck down, but I have never been destroyed. The word
struck down is very interesting. It's a wrestling term for being
knocked down or being thrown to the ground by your opponent.
Well, Paul had been knocked down many, many times, but he was
never down for the count, ever. Just whenever he was stoned and
left for dead and people thought it was over for Paul, what happens?
That pile of rocks begins to move. He shakes it off, he stands
up, he gets up. And this is what Paul says, I've
been knocked down many times, figuratively as well as literally.
But he says, I'm always able to get up. And that's going to
continue until that very moment that the Lord says, You're through. Your race is finished. Come home.
So you see, despite the best efforts of his enemies, Paul
is still here. That's the point. He is still
doing the work he was called to do. And this is what it means
that he can do all things through Christ who strengthens him. That's
what that passage means. It does not mean you get to do
whatever you want, whatever you set your mind to, that God's
gonna rubber stamp it and he's gonna give you the power to accomplish
it. It means that you will be able to do whatever God has called
you to do. You won't be able to submit to
him and do his will, because Christ is your strength. And
so Paul says to them, having said, therefore, that yes, it
was a gracious gift, and I rejoiced when I received it, but not because
it made me somehow content when I wasn't. Whether I received
the gift or not, was it going to matter? I'm going to continue
on proclaiming the gospel. But nonetheless, it was kind
of you to share in my trouble. How did they share in his trouble?
Well, in this instance, it's by sending gifts to him. The
Philippians were a mature and exceptional congregation. We
need to understand a little bit about this particular body of
Christ, this local assembly, to realize what actually is going
on here. Their love for Paul was second
only to their love for Christ and the gospel that had set them
free. As the old saying goes, talk is cheap, but The love that
these saints had for Christ and for Paul and for the gospel was
much more than lip service. As we saw last week, they were
one of the few churches who consistently supported the apostles ministry.
And as we saw last week as well, this is what scripture teaches
us to do, isn't it? As Christ told his disciples, a laborer
is worthy of his wages. So Paul echoed this very sentiment
of Christ himself whenever he shamed the Corinthians for freely
giving to false apostles while withholding support from those
who had brought them the truth of the gospel. And when instructing
Timothy on setting the churches in order, what does he say about
elders? Those who labor and preach and
teach earnestly are entitled to generous support. That's what
he says. Well, this had been the Philippians' practice from
the very beginning, from those early days when they first heard
the gospel from Paul and Silas. Remember, as they moved into
Philippi, they found no synagogue, which means that there must not
have been enough men of Jewish descent to have a synagogue.
You had to have 10. And so they found people praying
by the river, and they began to preach the gospel. And of
course, the most prominent of these were women who came. And
Philippi, you see, was a prosperous Roman colony. Lydia, which is
mentioned as the very first convert there in Philippi, one of the
founding members of the church there, she was a businesswoman
of some means. Scripture says she was a seller
of purple. And that meant that her clientele
would have been quite wealthy because only the very, very rich
could afford purple clothing. The reason is, is in those days
purple dye was so scarce. It was rare and it was expensive
because it was difficult and time-consuming to make. It was
extracted from small marine snails that had to be harvested from
the Mediterranean. And we're told that it took some
250,000 or more of these snails boiled for days to produce a
single ounce of purple dye. So some claim that this purple
dye and purple clothing was more precious than gold. Lydia then
was clearly a woman of means. And it's quite likely that others
in that congregation who had believed the gospel were also
of substantial wealth. It was a wealthy colony, a Roman
colony. And from the very beginning of
Paul's ministry in Macedonia, these newly converted Christians
enthusiastically used their resources, whatever they were, to help fund
Paul's gospel work. So at first, at least, it's likely
that they had the means to give generously. But things had changed
drastically. Many in the church had fallen
on hard times. And from what we can glean from
scripture, it seems that they had been impoverished for their
faithfulness to Christ. It wasn't bad business decisions.
It was people no longer willing to do business with them. Philippi
was filled with loyal Roman citizens. And from the very beginning,
many of them were hostile to the faith. Do you remember how
they threw Paul and Silas into prison on their very first visit?
And of course they did so because their livelihood was at stake. They not only saw Christianity
then as a threat to their livelihood, they were highly offended by
people refusing to bow to Caesar and worship him as God. They
were highly offended by those who wouldn't swear primary and
absolute allegiance to Rome. So all of these factors entered
in. These saints had likely been ostracized from society. They had likely been blackballed
from business. And it seems that this had happened
rather quickly because just three years after their conversion,
as the Apostle Paul writes his second letter to the Corinthians,
he describes the church at Philippi as joyfully enduring a severe
test of affliction. Nonetheless, they continued,
he says, giving generously despite being in the throes of extreme
poverty. What a change. Like Paul, these
saints knew what it was like to abound and what it was like
to be abased. Well, as Paul's letter tells
us, though the Philippians had been consistent supporters of
Paul's ministry, it had been some time since they had been
able to make connection with Paul. But whenever he was finally
settled in a Roman prison cell, and they got word of this, they
seized the opportunity and immediately gathered together a care package,
and they elected someone from their congregation, Epaphroditus,
to take it to Paul. And so while Paul rejoices over
their act of kindness, he wants them to know that it wasn't their
gift, but it was the love and concern that they had for him.
That's what gladdened his heart. He wasn't in the most favorable
of circumstances, though he was surely short of funds, surely
short of essentials and could use supplies. He was nonetheless
content, not discontent. He wasn't complaining. He was
rejoicing. He wasn't anxious. He was calm. He wasn't in a paralyzing panic. He steadily stayed his course,
even there in prison. He had been thoroughly discipled,
as he told us earlier, in the art of being content regardless
of his situation. The secret he had learned? Simple.
The Lord God is directing all things according to the counsel
of his will, and God's grace is always sufficient in every
circumstance of life. And so despite his present trouble,
he says, I can do all things. I can endure all things. I can
continue preaching and answering the call that's been placed upon
my life because of the power of Christ and Christ alone. He could do all of this with
contentment, whether or not these saints had sent their gift. And
that's when Paul says, yet it was kind for you to share in
my trouble. You see, Paul again is saying,
with or without your gift, I'm content. With or without your
gift, I'm able to do what God has called me to do, though Christ,
through Christ who strengthens me. Even so, he says, it was
kind of you to share in my trouble. In the Greek, it was kind of
you has been variously translated. Listen to some of these translations.
It was right of you. It was good of you. You have
done nobly by sending this gift to me. You did beautifully. You acted generously. Now you
can see from this range of interpretations, of translations, there's a wide
range of nuance in this word. And it does have a flavor of
thoughtfulness and graciousness to it. Well, what these saints
did, they did out of love for Christ. They did out of love
for Paul. They did out of love for the
gospel. But the most consistent translation
by far is simply, you have done well. You have done well. Paul is saying, even though I'm
content and doing without, even though, through the power of
Christ, I am strong for whatever I must face, you did the right
thing by sending this gift. It was the right thing to do.
This is how the body of Christ is supposed to function. We are
to bear one another's burdens. As Paul says in Romans 12, we're
not only to rejoice with those who rejoice. That's the fun part,
isn't it? We don't mind that. Let us know
when there's something that you're rejoicing over. We'll all gladly
join in. But find somebody to weep with
you when it's time to weep. Scripture says we're to do both.
And it's more than just a show of sympathy. We're to join with
those who rejoice. We're to join with those who
weep. Paul is admonishing us to participate
with one another, to be there for one another, to be involved
in the lives of one another. As he told the Philippians in
chapter two, we're to look to the interests of others, not
just our own. And so Paul is saying, you did
well by sending this gift for that's what God's people ought
to be doing. And what makes us even more beautiful
is that this congregation did so not begrudgingly, not out
of obligation, but cheerfully with a heart of compassion and
a spirit of love. And it was a sacrifice for them. Nonetheless, supporting those
who faithfully preach and teach the gospel, even though they
did so with such a heart of love and cheerfulness, it is also
a duty. It is what God expects from his
people. As we saw last week, there were many churches, Paul
said, that were muzzling the ox that treads out the corn.
They were failing to support those who fed them with the bread
of life, with the manna from heaven, with the life-giving
word of God. It's the responsibility of God's
people to support those who labor well in the preaching and teaching
of scripture. And on this front, the Philippian
congregation was to be commended. Not only were they supporting
the gospel ministry of the one from whom they had first heard
that word of life, they did so willingly, and as I said a moment
ago, sacrificially. It was a lot for them to be able
to gather this gift together. And of all the churches under
Paul's care, this was one of the poorest, if not the poorest.
And yet, as the apostle told the Corinthians, this congregation's,
and I love this phrase, he says, this congregation's abundance
of joy and extreme poverty has overflowed, he says, in a wealth
of generosity. Don't miss the irony in that.
This abundance of joy and extreme poverty has overflowed in a wealth
of generosity. Abundance of joy seems incompatible
with extreme poverty, doesn't it? I mean, most people would
say, those folks are out of their mind. Not only are they irritatingly
joyful, for people who are so poor, they just keep giving away
what little they have. What imbeciles, right? You know,
it doesn't square with the world's economics, does it? But as Jim
Elliot said, he is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to
gain that which he cannot lose. That's what it means to invest
treasure in heaven. And as Paul affirms in verse
19, God rewards those who obey him. We will get there in due
course. And so if there was ever a congregation that understood
Paul's command to rejoice in the Lord always, it was the Philippians
because they could give out of their poverty while rejoicing. It was an abundance of rejoicing. And so they could truly say,
whenever Paul says, rejoice in the Lord always, been there,
done that, got the T-shirt or the robe, right? I don't think
they had T-shirts. So Paul says, you were right
to share in my trouble. It was the right thing to do.
You did well. The word share is often translated
fellowship or to be a partner. So what he's saying is, you did
well to partner with me in my trouble. That's the same idea
that the apostle uses in the opening of this letter when he
says these saints had been his consistent partners in the gospel
from the very beginning. These saints had been transformed
by the power of the gospel that Paul had preached. They had rejoicing
hearts, and so they shared with Paul's zeal for the advancement
of this wondrous gospel. Great gratitude, they wanted
everyone to know the joy of what it means to be blessed of God
and to know the salvation that he has come to give. And so they
advanced the gospel in many ways. They advanced the gospel by meeting
together like we're doing this morning and worshiping him. They
promoted the gospel by proclaiming the good news that Paul had preached
to them. The gospel was reshaping their
lives. It was transforming them by the
renewing of their minds. They were partners, participants
in the gospel. And when Paul set out from Philippi
to take the gospel elsewhere, they wanted to share in his work.
You see, this is more than mental or verbal agreement. It's engagement. It's participation. It's working
together for a common cause. That's what partnership means.
It entails an investment. You know the old saying, put
your money where your mouth is? Well, that's what these saints
did, quite literally. But these saints didn't just
write a check and forget about it. They prayed for the Apostle
Paul. And they sent Epaphroditus, a
member of their own congregation who had to make a long and perilous
journey from Philippi in order to get to Rome. He carried with
him this gift. We're not told what the nature
of the gift is, but in addition to money, it likely included
food and supplies. That was not uncommon in that
day. But what's more, the gift included Epaphroditus himself.
He had come not only to bring gifts, but to be a gift to the
Apostle Paul and to assist him any way he could. You see, the
church there at Philippi, they couldn't all pack up and go to
Rome, so they elected to send Epaphroditus, that he might be
their hands and their feet, that he might be their representative. They sent him, that he might
come alongside the Apostle Paul and help bear the burden the
apostle was bearing. They were serious about supporting
Paul and the gospel. And so now we come then full
circle back to the paradox with which we started. Sharing in
the triumphs of the gospel is also sharing in the troubles
of the gospel, the adversities of the gospel. It is also suffering
that is involved in ministering the gospel. You can't have one
without the other. And so sending this gift, by
doing so, these saints were not only partnering with Paul in
the fruit of his ministry, they were partaking of his troubles
as well. They were investing in his gospel ministry, and therefore,
not only sharing in the triumphs of the gospel, they were sharing
in the troubles through which the triumphs of the gospel prevailed. As Paul said at the end of chapter
one, He says, you have been given a privilege, a privilege of not
only believing in Christ, but the privilege of suffering for
his sake. And I wish those who preach the health wealth gospel
today could read that verse and take it to heart. It is a privilege
to suffer for the cause of Christ. That's what the scripture says,
it cannot be denied. It is a blessing. It is a gift
from God. And the God who gives us the
gift of faith with which to believe, the God who grants to us the
heart to believe, the God who gives us repentance as a gift
is the very same God who says, now I'm granting you another
gift, the gift of suffering for my sake. So yes, these saints
had their own burdens to bear, but they were also identifying
with Paul and his plight. They were bearing his burden
with him just as he had identified with them in their struggles
that they faced. This is what the writer of Hebrews, by the
way, is talking about in Hebrews chapter 13. He says, remember
those in prison, and this next part's very important. Remember
those in prisons, it doesn't just mean Think about them from
time to time. Don't forget that they're there.
No? Remember those who are in prison
as though you were in prison with them. Therein is the heart
of the gospel. Remember those who are in prison
as though you were in prison with them. Don't forget about
them. Pray for them as if you were there yourself. And if possible,
provide any relief for them. Share in their trouble that you
can possibly provide. That's what this verse is saying.
And this is what the Philippian saints had done. They were true
partners of the gospel. They weren't partners who had
given a one-time gift and forgotten all about Paul and never followed
his ministry ever again. No, these were partners who were
steadfast and faithful. They recalled Paul regularly
in their prayers. They gave regularly and sacrificially
to the ministry. They were invested in Paul's
ministry. And this is how the whole body
of Christ is supposed to function, with mutual care and concern,
by identifying with one another. What does it mean when he says,
remember those who are in prison as though you're in prison with
them? That's identifying with them. Go more than just thinking
about, oh, they're in prison, that's a really sad situation.
Put yourself in their shoes, that's what he's saying. Because
we're called to look to the interests of others as well as our own.
We are called to bear one another's burdens. We are called to weep
with those who weep. We are called to rejoice with
those who rejoice. And so the question for us this
morning is, do we love Christ and the gospel enough to be true
partners in the advancement of the gospel? This is what we do
that's eternal. What we do for the kingdom of
heaven is the only thing we're going to take from here when
we die. As one fellow once said, he's
never seen a hearse with a U-Haul behind it. Everything you have
accumulated here is going to stay. And the only thing that
will go with you are the spiritual value that you placed upon what
you were able to do for the kingdom of heaven. Obeying the Lord Jesus
Christ and doing what he says. And so that's the question we
need to ask ourselves. Are we like the Philippians or
are we like the Corinthians? The Corinthians who were shamed
by Paul. for their failure to be what
they ought to be in Christ. Didn't mean they weren't Christians,
but they had a lot of growing up to do, and they were chastised
soundly by Paul. The book of 1 Corinthians is
not a chapter that goes by that doesn't have a stern rebuke.
But the Philippians, they had their problems. They had to deal
with difficulties. They had problems within the
body of Christ, difficulties. And Paul says, I'm urging you,
settle those matters. You are one in Christ, do not
allow anything to divide you, right? But these were saints
who I'm sure listened to that admonition because these were
saints who were true partners in the advancement of the gospel.
And the gospel must not be just proclaimed, but believed and
lived. And so the question, again, Do
we love Christ and the gospel enough to be true partners? Are
we willing to bear one another's burdens, even when it's inconvenient? Are we willing to put ourselves
in the shoes of others and really consider them, not just with
sympathy, but with empathy, with full and true compassion? My
prayer is may the Lord give us the grace to follow Thee Godly
example of the Apostle Paul, those who served with him, and
this beloved congregation who had given so much for the cause
of the gospel. May he give us the grace to be
true and faithful partners in the gospel. And to him be glory
forever and ever. Amen.
True Partners in the Gospel
Series Philippians
Paul refers to the Philippian church as partners in the Gospel. Their commitment to Christ, Paul and the Gospel was more that verbal and intellectual agreement. Despite their own poverty, they faithfully supported the Apostle, especially in his troubles.
| Sermon ID | 328221335101444 |
| Duration | 36:03 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | Philippians 4:14-20 |
| Language | English |
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