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Philippians 2:3-7 RSV I think that it’s often extremely difficult to be a contemporary American and be a Christian. It wasn’t always so. The values that this country embraced in its infancy were similar to Christian values. Not so now. Our thinking goes along these lines: We are human beings. We have rights. Therefore, we are valuable; we should be valued. This is very different from the thinking of the early Americans and from the thinking of the Bible. Our value doesn’t come from our being human beings. Our value comes from our being loved by God. And that love—that value—doesn’t guarantee us rights. Just the opposite. It guarantees us obligations. Paul tells us in Philippians to do nothing from selfishness or conceit. We have convinced ourselves that we aren’t selfish. But we are. The RSV here actually waters down the meaning as given in the Greek. What is translated here as selfishness is translated in the KJV as strife. And that doesn’t even really explain what the Greek word means. In fact, we really don’t even have an English word that gives the complete meaning to this very broad and expressive Greek word. The Greek erithia means (according to Vine’s): denotes ambition, self-seeking, rivalry, self-will being an underlying idea in the word. It includes the meaning of “seeking to win followers.” So, in a sense, it’s the desire to have everyone be in your side, want what you want, support your views, defend your position. It is the sense that we are the center of the universe and that our priorities are what matters. Doesn’t that sound to you like the constant demands for rights that we have in America? And Paul tells us not to do anything from this perspective, from this desire, from this motivation. “But I deserved that promotion. I worked harder; I’m more qualified.” Paul tells us to do nothing from this perspective. “But there are people who have greater advantage than I do.: Paul tells us to do nothing from this perspective. “But that person always gets more than I do even though things should be equal between us.” Paul tells us to do nothing from this perspective. Even as churches, we want every right that we can gain from the government. I read part of a discussion last month where it was asserted that churches needed to legally organize (incorporate) so that members could be protected and could access the tax benefits. What would Paul say? Obviously, we aren’t to consider anything from a self-serving perspective. Why? He who did not spare his own Son but gave Him up for us all, will He not also give us all things with him? (Romans 8:32 RSV) The second thing Paul tells us to do is to not seek things from the perspective of conceit. The definition of conceit is “a result of mental activity : thought; individual opinion; favorable opinion; especially : excessive appreciation of one's own worth or virtue.” The thing is, none of us think that we excessively appreciate our own worth or virtue . . . but we do. Any time we aren’t willing to give in to the demands of someone else, any time we aren’t willing to consider the situation from their perspective, any time we think that someone is mean to us simply because they are a “bad person,” we are having an excessive appreciation of our own worth or virtue. Paul tells us to do nothing from this perspective. “In humility, count others as better than yourselves.” Rather than demand our own rights, we are to focus our efforts on doing for others, because—in our minds—the others are better than us. That’s not the mindset of the contemporary American and, unfortunately, the contemporary American Christian. But it should be! Rather than being people who demand our rights, we should be people who are acting in humility, trusting God to take care of us when we are put upon, when we are taken advantage of, when we are persecuted. God gave us His Son. That is what gives us value. God will give all things to us; we don’t need to demand them, to fight for them, to insist upon them. Copyright 2008 by Robin L. O'Hare. All Rights Reserved. Used by permission. Permission to reproduce will be given by author by contacting servinggodalone @ yahoo.com. All copies must be reproduced in their entirety and distributed without cost. |
