Restoring
the Joy
Sermon # 5
Joy Is Found In Keeping Your
Balance.
One of the hardest things in life to
attain is balance; to balance work and leisure, career with family, faith and day to day
life. Yet it is only achieving balance, that
we can live lives of purpose. Today in a message I have entitled Joy Is Found
In Keeping Your Balance we are going to see that joy is maintained by
keeping balance in our Christian lives. Balance between Purpose and Power, between Attitude
and Action and between Seriousness and Joy. [main points derived from Charles Swindoll. Laugh
Again: Experience Outrageous Joy. (Dallas: Word, 1991)]
First,
Balancing Purpose and Power (2:12-13)
Therefore,
my beloved, as you have always obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now much more in my
absence, work out your own salvation with fear and trembling; (13) for it is God who works
in you both to will and to do for His good pleasure.
The second phrase of verse
twelve, work out your own salvation with fear and
trembling is much misunderstood. Paul is not inferring that a Christian must do
something to earn salvation. It was Paul who had penned the words found in Ephesians
2:8-9, For by grace you have been saved through faith,
and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, (9) not of works, lest
anyone should boast. Is he now saying that salvation is by works? No, the
truth remains that salvation is freely given by God to everyone who believes in His Son
Jesus Christ, as the one who shed his blood on the cross as full payment for his sins.
First of all, in order to understand what
Paul is saying here, we must keep in mind that he is writing to believers, so obviously
his words have nothing to do with how to become a Christian. Therefore, the idea of working out your salvation must be referring to
living out your faith. The word translated work out
(katergazesthai)
means work to full completion and is often used for working a
mine or working a field. Our lives have tremendous potential,
like a mine or a field and He wants to help us fulfill that potential.
Being saved initiates the
believer into a life of obligation. Acknowledging Jesus Christ as your LORD obligates the
believer to obey Him. So working out our salvation
does not mean working for but rather making salvation operational in our lives. He is not
talking about how to become a Christian but the need to live as one.
Charles Swindoll
explains it this way, When we become ill, we go to a
physician. He diagnoses our ailment and prescribes the proper treatment. He hands us a
small slip of paper upon which he had written the correct prescription, and we take it to
the pharmacist who fills the prescription and gives us the medication. So far, everything
has been done for us diagnosis, prescription, medication. It now becomes our
responsibility to follow the doctors orders exactly as stated. By working out the
process we enjoy the benefits of the physicians and pharmacists contributions
to our health. We recover.
This is also true
spiritually speaking.
[Charles Swindoll. Laugh
Again: Experience Outrageous Joy. (Dallas: Word, 1991) p.97]
When Paul speaks of
God working in you (v. 14) (Gr. energon)
energizing is the English equivalent
of the Greek word used here. But this working of the Holy Spirit may not be sudden or
comfortable. For example, it took God 40 years to prepare Moses for the task of leading
the children of Israel out of captivity in Egypt (Acts 7:30). As Moses tended sheep on the
backside of the desert (Ex. 3:1) God was working in him so that one day He might work
through him.
Susan Taylor tells of
lessons learned from experiencing a California earthquake. She was in bed in the early
hours of the morning when an earth-quake struck. As her house shook, she tumbled from her
bed. She managed to stand underneath an arched doorway in her hall and watched in horror
as her whole home literally tumbled down around her. Where her bed had once stood, she
later discovered nothing but a pile of rubble. She lost everything -- every button, every
dish, her automobile, every stitch of clothing.
Susan huddled, scared and
crying, in the darkness of her house. It was very early in the morning and the sun had not
yet risen. She began to call out for help. Crying and calling.
. That experience, by the way, was to
permanently change her
. And this is what she says: "Before the quake I had all
the trappings of success, but my life was out of balance. I wasn't happy because I was
clinging to things in my life and always wanting more. My home, my job, my clothes, a
relationship -- I thought they were my security. It took an earthquake and losing
everything I owned for me to discover that my security had been with me all along."
She adds, "There's a power within us that
It's as if life sometimes has to
hit us over the head to get our attention! But when we realize where to find true
security, then we know also where to find peace. [From JOY ALONG THE WAY by Steve
Goodier -
www.sermonillustrator.org/illustrator/sermon4/hit_over_the_head.htm
Not Only Balancing Purpose and Power but
Secondly,
Balancing Attitude and Action (2:14-16)
First Paul says in verse
fourteen, Do all things without complaining and disputing, Notice
that this verse says, do all things in fact in
the original Greek the word translated all things
is first for emphasis. Most Christians are able to do some things with out complaining and
disputing but it is when we are command to do all
things with a joyful spirit that the difficulty comes in.
Here Paul presents his counsel in both a
negative (v. 14) and a positive light (vv. 15-16).
Negatively he says, Watch
your Attitude. A bad attitude is revealed
in two ways, those things we do alone complaining
and those things we do publicly disputing.
Watch Your Attitude In Things Done in
Private.
The children of Israel were guilty of
constant grumbling during the years of wandering in the wilderness. When they were in
Egypt they grumbled because they were slaves in Egypt. Whey they got out of Egypt they
grumbled because they were no longer in Egypt. When they complained that they had nothing to eat, God provided manna, they then
complained because they did not have meat. They grumbled and they grumbled, for the entire
forty years in the wilderness and when they arrived in the Promised Land they were still
grumbling.
The man called the prince of preachers,
Charles Spurgeon, said this about those who seem to be the first to complain; A heavy wagon was being dragged along a country lane by a team of
oxen. The axles groaned and creaked terribly, when the oxen turning around thus addressed
the wheels, Hey there, why do you make so much noise? We bear all the labor, and
wenot youought to cry out! Those complain first in our churches who have
the least to do. The gift of grumbling is largely dispensed among those who have no other
talents, or who keep what they have wrapped up in a napkin. [Charles Spurgeon in The Quotable Spurgeon.
www.bible.org /illus/c/c-103]
We
have no more right to put our discordant states of mind into he lives of those around us
and rob them of their sunshine and brightness than we have to enter their houses and steal
their silverware.
If grumbling and complaining is a habitual
problem in your life, then make a decision right now to replace it with thanksgiving and
encouragement to others.
Secondly, Watch Your Attitude In Things
Done in Public.
The word translated disputing
also has a legal connotation and may refer to the Philippian Christians taking each other
to civil court to settle differences a practice that Paul had condemned among the church
at Corinth (1 Cor. 6:1-11).
If we
feel the need to constantly complain and grumble then it is a sign of an inward spiritual
problem.
Having stated the
negative, Watch your Attitude he now states from the Positive standpoint that we
are to Prove that Your Are Different. (vv. 15-16) that
you may become blameless and harmless, children of God without fault in the midst of a
crooked and perverse generation, among whom you shine as lights in the world, (16) holding
fast the word of life, so that I may rejoice in the day of Christ that I have not run in
vain or labored in vain.
There ought to be a
vivid contrast between the lifestyle of believers and that of unbelievers.
Prove Your Are
Different By Living Differently Than the World.
Paul says that they
can prove that they are different than the world with three specific Christian goals.
First, by being blameless (amemptoi) this means that they are to live
above justifiable criticism (1 Peter 3:16). Secondly, they are to be harmless (akeraioi) -
devoid of matters foreign or improper in the heart. So that their nature as Gods
children would be clearly evident (amona- without Fault). Each of these terms
conveys the idea of getting rid of anything that would defile or dilute Gods image
in them. I like the way Stuart Briscoe, paraphrase this verse, He is a
real child of God who believes like one and behaves like one and has nothing in his life
that people can get after him about. [Start Briscoe. Bound For Joy: A Bible
Commentary for Laymen Philippians. (Ventura, Calif.: Regal Books, 1975) p. 79]
We are called to be
like Daniel. Daniel lived in the midst of ungodly Babylon. He did not live his life off in
a corner somewhere, he lived in the kings palace and he worked for the king. He
lived a life that was so upright, (I said upright not uptight) that even when his enemies
tried to do away with him they were forced to conclude, "We're
never going to find anything against this Daniel unless we can cook up something
religious." (The Message)
Prove Your Are
Different By Shining as Lights
It was this same
concept that Jesus had in mind when He called his followers to be the salt of the earth (Matt 5:14-16). Here in the Sermon
on the Mount Jesus compared his followers not only to salt but also to be the light of the world. Paul takes up this figure
when he encourages the Philippian believers to shine as
lights in the world. The word he
used for shine is literally luminaries (phosteres).
We all know the song we learned as children This little light of mine, I am going to
shine. But the truth is greater
than that, we are not called to be little
lights we are called to be bold,
blazing, life giving, STARS!!!
But one thing is for sure, The
Grumbling
has got to go before the shining can start! We dont need to be shout or scream or
make a scene, we just need to shine. Just live a life free of complaining and disputing.
Prove Your Are
Different By Holding Forth the Word.
Paul says we are to hold
fast the word of life here the words holding
fast (present participle epechontes)
can be translated either holding fast or holding forth and I believe that both are
appropriate! It is necessary for the believer to hold forth that which he is holding fast.
We are called to share what we know and
tell what we have discovered. But how can we do that? We can write letters, give
away books, lend tapes or videos, visit friends, relate our experiences, in other words,
hold forth our experiences.
Why do we need to hold
fast and hold forth Word of God? Because, while it is certainly true in our country that
it is relatively easy and inexpensive to purchase a copy of the Scripture, the fact
remains that the Scripture are hardly ever respected or even known by an increasing
portion of our population.
Balancing
Attitude and Action by
Watching
your Attitude and
Proving you Are
Different
Third,
Balancing Seriousness and Joy (2:17-18)
Yes,
and if I am being poured out as a drink offering on the sacrifice and service of your
faith, I am glad and rejoice with you all. (18) For the same reason you also be glad and
rejoice with me.
This is a serious
situation that Paul is in, and he realizes that he may not get out of it alive. But he
refused to focus only on the dark side of the situation. He refuses to be under, or
controlled by his circumstances. Far from being embittered by his circumstances he sees
them as a source of joy.
If we want our
Christian conduct to make a difference before this dark world then we must live with joy.
I like the way Warren Wiersbe sums up this
passage, Life is not a series of
disappointing ups and downs. Rather, it is a sequence of delightful ins
and outs. God works in we work out! The example comes from Christ, the energy
comes from the Holy Spirit, and the result is JOY! [Warren Wiersbe. Be Joyful - Philippians.
(Wheaton: Victor Books, 1986) p. 78]
Conclusion
Joy is found in
living a life of balance
Balancing Purpose
and Power
Balancing Attitude
and Action
Balancing Seriousness and Joy.