Community of Grace
Preaching Ministry of Community of Grace - Amherst, NY
Community of Grace
Resurrect Your Courage
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Peter Krol
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Philippians 1:18-26
I rejoice. Yes, and I will rejoice. For I know that through your prayers and the help of the Spirit of Jesus Christ, this will turn out for my deliverance, as it is my eager expectation and hope that I will not be at all ashamed, but that with full courage now, as always, Christ will be honored in my body, whether by life or by death. For to me to live is Christ and to die is gain. If I am to live in the flesh, that means fruitful labor for me. Yet which I shall choose, I cannot tell. I am hard pressed between the two. My desire is to depart and be with Christ, for that is far better. But to remain in the flesh is more necessary in your account. Convinced of this, I know that I will remain and continue with you all, be a progress in joy in the faith, so that in me you have my ample cause to glory in Christ Jesus because of my coming to you again. Thank you. Greetings from Pennsylvania, from Penn State country. It's great to be with you. I serve with Disciple Makers Campus Ministry as the president of the organization. We have chapters at about 28 campuses across Pennsylvania right now, and our mission is to raise up effective disciple-making disciples of Jesus Christ on college campuses. What that means is that we work with the boys and girls who come into the university setting, and over the course of their time there, we hope to see them grow into men and women of God who by the time they graduate, they're dangerous because wherever they go, they know how to study the Bible and teach it to others. They know how to mentor younger believers and help make disciples to mentor them in Christ, and we want them to not be afraid of what's in the culture around them, that they know how to engage the culture, win people to Christ, show people who Jesus is so that wherever they go, they can get involved in their churches, become leaders in their churches in society, and continue advancing the kingdom of Christ to the ends of the earth. That's what we're up to, and it's a real privilege for me to be here with you this morning. It was great to be here for the weekend. Thanks for the invitation. Being in campus ministry, we are now a few weeks past Easter, but we're just a few weeks until graduation, and seasons like graduation are great opportunities, aren't they, for some reflection, some consideration of the big picture of life and death. I remember just a few days before my own college graduation, getting together with a good friend of mine at my college where all of our schoolwork was done, grades were in, we're just waiting for graduation, and we spent a lazy afternoon together reflecting on our four years in college and even some of our regrets. He was an engineer, and actually he regretted having basically locked himself in a computer lab for four years, and he wished he had spent more time with people. I would have loved to have made better use of my money and my time through those years, but as we were reflecting, it was that kind of a season, that kind of an opportunity, and so this morning, I invite you to join me. Would you step back with me a bit and consider what is this all for? Why are we here? What are we doing with ourselves? So why do you do what you do? What are your biggest dreams, and what are some of your fears that make you feel the most ashamed? Because if Jesus rose bodily from the dead three days after dying on a Roman cross, that means it's now possible for you and me to see clearly what life and death are all about. There is hope for your bodily resurrection on the day of judgment to be like Jesus' bodily resurrection, and when that day comes, that day of judgment and resurrection, do you want that to be a good day? But even before that day comes, even now, Jesus can resurrect our sleepy lives so that we live for Him. Have you been afraid of death? Have you been afraid to take too many risks in life? And would you like to gain more clarity on your life in this season? Would you like to resurrect your courage so life and death aren't so scary anymore? Well, our passage this morning will help you to do just that. In fact, the title of this sermon is Resurrect Your Courage. Resurrect Your Courage. And as we take a look at this text in Philippians, we'll see that this passage will help us to resurrect our courage in two ways. First, in verses 18 to 20, it will help us to rejoice that Christ is everything. Rejoice that Christ is everything. And then in 21 to 26, we'll find two new perspectives. Rejoice that Christ is everything, and we'll find two new perspectives. Let's take a moment once more to ask God's blessing on our time in His Word. Our Father in heaven, we are so grateful for Your Word and for Your Spirit, whom You have promised to those who love the Lord Jesus. And we pray, Holy Spirit, that You would please come and enlighten us and strengthen us, teach us from Your Word, that we might step back and take a look at life and death and that our courage may be resurrected even in anticipation of that bodily resurrection You have in store for those who are Yours. Please help us now in this time, we ask in Jesus' name. Amen. As you step back to get a bigger picture view of life and death, the first thing to do is to rejoice that Christ is everything. Rejoice that Christ is everything. We see this in verses 18 to 20. We see the author Paul doing this right at the end of verse 18. He says, in that I rejoice, yes, and I will rejoice. We ought to ask, what is he rejoicing about? And that's what he says at the beginning of the verse. It's that in every way, whether in pretense or in truth, Christ is proclaimed. Now, do you know what's going on here in the letter of Philippians? In the paragraph right before this, Paul has been talking about being in prison. And we know from other parts of the Bible that Paul is in prison because some people thought he talked too much about Jesus, and he tried to plant churches with the wrong kind of people. So they got him incarcerated. And now that he's in prison, some other ministry leaders in the area are trying to take advantage of Paul's situation. Many of them have gone out preaching Christ in Paul's absence, and some of those people do it because they love Jesus Christ, but others of them are doing it just to hurt Paul. Maybe this is their chance to get some of his followers to join their ministries instead. Or maybe they can get a better reputation than him. If it were today, they would be looking to cash in on the book deals that Paul was getting before, maybe get themselves invited to preach at the big conferences because Paul's in prison now. He ain't preaching anywhere. Yet despite such envy and rivalry, here in verse 18, Paul rejoices, and he rejoices because Christ is proclaimed. And what's going on here is Paul is putting his money where his mouth is. He's been preaching that Jesus Christ is Lord and that He Himself is a sinner saved by God's sheer mercy. And it's at times like this when a preacher finds out whether he really believes all that stuff he's been preaching. Like, is Jesus really the Lord, or have I been making myself the Lord all this time? Is Jesus really the King of Kings? Is He really the pearl of great price, or am I just in this for myself and for my own self-respect? And so we see Paul's heart coming out. He rejoices, verse 18, that Christ is proclaimed, and not only that Christ is proclaimed, but going on to 19, he rejoices that this will turn out for my deliverance. He says that the Philippian Christians have been praying there, beginning 19, I know through your prayers, they've been praying for His deliverance, and the Spirit of Jesus Christ will help Him to be delivered. But what does He mean? What is His deliverance? What is this thing that they're praying for that the Spirit will help with that Paul's anticipating? How can these things, and even the proclamation of Jesus Christ by rivals and the prayers of a small church, how can these things deliver Him from anything? What is this deliverance He's looking for? Is it a deliverance out of prison? Yeah, sort of. Down in 26, we heard that He expects to get out of prison because He wants them to have cause to glory in Christ Jesus because of my coming to you again. So yeah, He expects to be delivered from prison. That's part of it, but that's not all of it. Because right before this in verse 17, the whole thing about those rival preachers was that they were trying to afflict Paul in his imprisonment. In other words, they're taking advantage of his incarceration so they can suck up some of his ministry success for themselves. And maybe they can even tarnish his name in the process. So really, He expects to be delivered from that affliction. He wants to be delivered from the harm that envious preachers are trying to cause Him. He wants to be delivered from prison. He wants to be delivered from this harm people are trying to cause Him. But that's not all either. Because right after our passage, in the very next section, He'll say in verse 28 that when believers have enough courage to not be afraid of people who are trying to hurt them, then their courage is itself a sign that the opponents will be destroyed and the courageous person will be saved. It's a sign of their destruction, but of your salvation. And that's the same Greek word that He's using right there in verse 28, the word salvation. And in verse 19, it gets translated as deliverance, same word, same thing. In other words, Paul is saying, if you're strong enough and you're secure enough in Christ that you don't care whether people are trying to soil your name, then your courage is itself proof that the day when Jesus returns to judge the living and the dead, that will be a very good day for you. Would you like the day of judgment to be a good day for you? I sure hope so. That's what Paul wished for the Philippians at the very beginning of the letter. Earlier in chapter 1, he was wanting them in verse 10 to be pure and blameless for the day of Christ. Paul wants judgment day to be a good day for him. He wishes that for them. And now we see Paul has the same expectation for himself. Judgment day is going to be a very good day. And he fleshes this out further here in our text in verse 20, that he fully expects not to be ashamed even while others are trying to shame him, but he will have full courage now as always, while Christ is honored in his body, whether by life or death, no matter whether Paul lives or dies, he wants full courage either way while Christ is honored. So what Paul is going through is really hard. I can't imagine it. We're so far removed from it. It's easy to just talk about, oh, Paul in prison. But honestly, think about it. What if the secret police came and arrested your pastor and put him in prison? Wouldn't you question whether maybe he did something wrong? Maybe we're in the wrong place. There's all kinds of ramifications of this. This is really hard. And on top of that, while he's in prison and he can't defend himself, he's got people acting in the name of Jesus Christ who are actively trying to wreck his ministry. And yet, because they are still proclaiming Jesus Christ, Paul trusts that Jesus will save him from the very pain that they are trying to inflict on him. And he expects the spirit of Jesus to help him to live now with full courage. He's not cowering in fear because people stopped coming to his church. He's not the kind of person who's trembling with anxiety because someone said something bad about him on Instagram. He's living in full courage that Christ will be honored in his body. In other words, Paul has a profound grasp on the cosmic reality that Christ is everything. Christ, Jesus Christ, is the subject of Paul's message. Jesus Christ is the one who sends his spirit to rescue Paul from all this pain. Christ is the one who will declare Paul not guilty at the final judgment. And Jesus Christ is the one who gets the credit for all of these things regardless of whether Paul lives or dies. For Paul, Christ is everything, and that's what drives his joy. So what drives your joy? Really, I understand you're not in prison for Christ like Paul is, but shouldn't our joy look similar no matter what our circumstances? Does your spiritual stability rise and fall with your success in school or in your career or in your home? Does your stability rise and fall with the amount of affirmation you get from people you care about? Or does it rise or fall with the quality of your love life or whatever else it might be? Now, it's not wrong to want to get delivered out of a bad circumstance or to be delivered from a bad name. Paul wants those things, but does your spiritual well-being depend on it? Or does your joy follow from the fact that Jesus Christ is king? He died and he rose from the dead, and hey, at least there's some people out there talking about him. And when I meet him on the day of judgment, that's going to be a very good day for me. Because I'm sorry to have to say this, but the day of judgment will not be a good day for all of us. This deliverance from judgment is possible only if Christ is everything for you. Apart from him, life will still be full of shame and death and death will not be the same. And I'm sorry to say this, but I'm sorry to say this, but we'll be full of exposure. If you have no room for courage in Christ now because you're too busy honoring yourself, then deliverance is not the word Jesus uses for you. He uses words like condemnation, judgment, darkness, weeping, and unquenchable fire. Please, if you haven't yet, turn to Jesus Christ. Pledge your allegiance to him. Because when he is everything, there's reason for joy no matter what the circumstances are, and your courage is without shame. And then your whole perspective on life and death changes in dramatic ways because whatever you are facing, like Paul, you know that it will turn out for your deliverance by the time that last day comes. And you can expect that last day to be a very good day. So when you can bank on such deliverance, when your hope is in Christ, Christ is everything, and the day of Christ's return in the distant future is something you desire, something you can't wait for, how will that impact your life right now in the midst of all these hard things? How will that help you to endure your affliction with courage? Well, when Christ is everything, that takes us to our second point this morning. It enables you to find two new perspectives. You can find two new perspectives in verses 21 through 26. That's what the rest of this passage is about. Now that Christ fuels Paul's joy and that joy turns into courage under fire, Paul talks about how that enables him to step back, to evaluate, take stock, and he sees everything in a whole new way. In particular, his two new perspectives are that dying ain't so scary, and therefore living ain't so scary either. Will you find these new perspectives as well, if Christ is everything? Verse 20 ends with Paul's acknowledgement that Christ will be honored whether he lives or dies, and this launches him into one of the grandest reflections on life and death in all the scripture. Verse 21 summarizes his two new perspectives. To me, to live is Christ, and to die is gain. What does that mean? Let's talk about dying first. Let's talk about how dying ain't so scary anymore. It's not scary because dying is gain. At death, Paul will finally gain. He will achieve or acquire everything he's been waiting for. And what's that? What does that mean? He clarifies it for us in verse 23. To depart, here's my desire, to depart, that is to die, is far better. It's what he most desires. And why does he desire it? It's because when that happens, it means he will be with Christ. You see, Paul knows that life on planet earth is a lot like being engaged to be married. And I am convinced that engagement is the absolute worst part of any romantic relationship. It's the worst. For that reason, when I counsel couples, I encourage them to have as short of an engagement as possible. Why is it the worst? At least for those who want to honor Christ in their bodies, engagement stinks because friendship is great. It's super fun. It's generally supportive. We all need friends. We love it. Dating is exciting. It's this fresh new thing, and it's, you know, the prospect of something special is just getting started, getting to know your partners, like going on a treasure hunt. And you're working together to figure out whether it's in your best interest to tie the knot. And then when you're like, yeah, this is great, let's do it. And then you get engaged. And now you want to be together. You have committed to being together for the rest of your lives. But at the end of every glorious evening together, you still have to say goodbye. See you next time. It's only once the vows have been taken, the officiant has made the pronouncement that you can finally be together from this day forward. This is why I think marriage is like death. Because at the moment of death, you're no longer promised to Christ or engaged to Christ. You get to go and be with Him for the rest of your life. Not even death do us part anymore. No more saying goodbye. No more saying, Jesus, why are you so far away? Jesus, why is this so hard? That's what Paul desires. And it's far better than living in perpetual engagement. So is that what you desire? Do you want to be with Christ? Because if not, please do a heart check. This is what this whole thing is about. Do you want to go from here and be with Christ? Now, please understand, I'm not encouraging anybody to take their life. That's not what Paul's talking about at all. He does not desire death. He desires to be with Christ. And since that can't happen until he dies, then he's ready to die in whatever way most honors Christ and not Paul himself. The older I get, the more commonly I find myself praying for Jesus to please just come back or just take me to be with you so I don't have to worry about all this stuff down here anymore. But how do you view death? Are you afraid to die? Do you hope to never die? I mean, do you think maybe like some folks in the world out there that you can avoid death with the right diet, with enough exercise, with the right medical care? I have no problem with diets or with health care or with exercise. Nobody should desire a miserable life or an excruciating death. Self-care really helps to avoid such things. But when you gaze inevitably on your own death, when you have those moments of sobriety when death suddenly becomes a real possibility to you, like, oh, man, is this the day? Do you see, what do you see when that happens? Do you see something worth fearing or something worth embracing? Because fearing death will always make you less joyful in the Lord. In the 19th century, a British missionary named James Calvert went to preach the message of Christ to cannibals in the Fiji Islands. And Calvert's joy was driven by the fact that Christ is everything. And because of that, it transformed his perspective so that death wasn't so scary for him anymore. On the way to the islands, the ship's captain tried to prevent him from going ashore, saying, you will lose your life and the lives of those with you if you go among such savages. Calvert's response, we died before we came here. And he went and preached the gospel. What will be your perspective on death the next time it seems like a real possibility? Will your fear of death prevent you from doing hard things for the sake of Christ, your joy? Don't you want something more out of life? Don't you want unbelievable clarity and peace surrounding your death? It can be yours if only Christ would be everything to you. Because when Christ is everything, to die is gain. How does this apply? Maybe this week, you can practice dying. I don't mean going and laying down on the train tracks or anything like that, but I mean practicing the attitude you would like to do. It's not about the attitude you would like to have toward death. Maybe look around in the church and ask yourself, who in here seems like they're closer to death than me? I won't call them old. Who seems closer to death, but they look like they are preparing for it so well? Get some time with those people. Pray with them. Hear their stories. Learn from Who is Jesus to you? How do you know? Find a way for their joy in Christ in the face of death to soak into your own heart. Find a way to believe that dying would be your gain. It would be to your profit. But that's not all. Not only is death not so scary anymore, but if Christ is everything, then life won't be so scary anymore either. This is the first part of Paul's statement in verse 21. To live is Christ. So what on earth does that mean? To live is Christ. We don't talk that way. So I'm glad he expands on the idea for us in verse 22. He says, if I am to live in the flesh, that means fruitful labor for me. So Paul, looking at his life, he sees a vibrant and fulfilling life being a life of fruitful labor. And his labor, remember, involves proclaiming Christ. He comes back to this in verse 25, where if he does not get to depart and be with Christ, then he will remain and continue with these people that he ministers to. And what's going to be his fruitful labor of serving them? It is all of this, the end of verse 25, it's for your progress and joy in the faith. So he says then in 26 that when he gets out of prison and he goes to visit them again, they will have ample cause to glory in Christ Jesus. So to live is Christ, for Paul means he gets to be with people, he gets to encourage them so they make progress and joy in faith and they return glory to Jesus Christ. There's this cycle, Jesus gives Paul life so he can go and lay his life down for others and they make progress in faith and they return glory back to Jesus Christ. So to live is Christ means that Paul sees his life as being all about bringing people to Jesus so they might gain joy from Jesus and then return honor and glory to Jesus. It's like Paul's life is an electrical charge and other people are the electrons. His joy gets them excited and they jump into a higher energy orbit giving honor to Christ. Now if you don't understand that illustration, neither do I. But a graduate student in chemistry told me it made sense. So there you go. When Christ is everything, life isn't so scary anymore. Paul is not so worried about what people think of him. Are you worried about what people think of you? Do your palms sweat or your knees knock if you have to get in front of people? Or do you have bad dreams about friends rejecting you or authority figures disapproving of you? And if you do, if that's a concern of yours, is that a happy way to live? Does that improve your quality of life? When you're afraid all the time of what's going to happen and what people are doing, does that improve your life and make you look forward with eagerness and joy to each new day? Young people, it's not fun to be laughed at by classmates, is it? I mean, sometimes it's cool if you tell a joke and they laugh. That feels great. But if you actually answer a question properly and people laugh, that's kind of awful. But what if Jesus were with you? And what if your courage to stand with Jesus gave other people in your class courage and joy in Jesus as well? Would that be worth it to get laughed at a little bit so others can come closer to Jesus? Do you all catch Paul's pathway to a fuller life? It's when your anxiety is not for yourself, but it's in regard to others, the progress of others in their faith. Your fuller life is when you live not just to accumulate more stuff, but to help others find joy in Christ. It's when your love for Christ leads other people to give glory to Christ. That's what he means when he says to live is Christ. Did you think that living meant getting good paid time off with a nice house, full retirement plan? Because according to this text, truly living is serving in children's ministry or taking a meal to someone in the church who's sick, telling friends and telling your own neighbors that Jesus Christ is king. Maybe it means joining or starting a small group or working at a Christian summer camp. It means being willing to take risks so that others can find joy in Christ. So church, is your life filled with shame and fear? If so, please take a closer look at it with me this morning. Could it be that Jesus Christ is not yet everything for you? Paul says that to me, to live is Christ. Do you say to me, to live is me? The resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead in the body makes it possible to live life without being so scared of life. Life is too short to spend on our passions and pleasures. Jesus Christ came to deliver us from all that. So would you live your life in light of the resurrection of Jesus? Do so and it just might be life to your shamed and weary soul. Because when Christ is everything, living and dying ain't so scary anymore. Let's pray. Our Father in heaven. Lord, we are looking to Jesus. Please help us see how needing much is pitiable and far from true wisdom. And it leads to slavery. Lord, why do we bring it upon ourselves? Help us then to be free from this grievous bondage. And when, Lord, will we lay hold on heaven and be able to stand on that height? For a great thing is it that having cut all these cords, we should be able to lay hold of the city which is above. Putting away what does not matter, let us keep to what is necessary. Thus shall we lay hold of eternal life through the grace and loving kindness of our resurrected Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be glory forever and ever. Amen. Let's sing together. Amen.