Philippians 3:4b-14 The Bible that “God has put eternity in men’s hearts”. In other words, every person on earth knows that
this life is not all there is and so we yearn for another life that death will
not destroy. This desire for eternal
life is part of the natural knowledge of God
But because we are
by nature fallen creatures—this knowledge that comes from God-- does not lead us back to God—it leads us away from God to ourselves-- and the mistaken
idea that we can make a way to God
and get to heaven on our own. This was
certainly true of the Jewish religion of Paul’s day. He wrote of himself:
If anyone else thinks
he has reason for confidence in the flesh, I have more: circumcised on the
eighth day, of the people of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of
Hebrews; as to the law, a Pharisee; as to zeal, a persecutor of the church; as
to righteousness under the law, blameless.
Paul
grew up believing that life with God- and the hope of eternal life- was based
upon who you were- and who your parents were- and what you did- and how you
lived -and the rules you kept. Paul believed
it so much that he persecuted those who claimed that eternal life was a gift
given by God through faith in Jesus.
We face the same
temptation: that because we belong to
the right church or come from a good family or live an outwardly righteous life
that somehow all this earns us a life with God.
But who we are-
and what we have done- CANNOT be compared to knowing Jesus Christ as our Lord
and Savior. That is what Paul discovered
on the Road to Damascus
and that encounter with Jesus changed how he viewed his entire life and what he
counted on to get him to heaven. He went
from trusting in himself—to trusting in Jesus.
Paul wrote:
Whatever gain I had,
I counted as loss for the sake of Christ. Indeed, I count everything as loss
because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I
have suffered the loss of all things and count them as rubbish, in order that I
may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that
comes from the law, but that which comes through faith in Christ, the
righteousness from God that depends on faith…
It’s important that
we understand what Paul is—and is not—saying- because it has an application for
our lives too. He is not saying that his
parents weren’t good people or that the Jews were not particularly blessed or
that keeping the law didn’t matter.
What he WAS saying
is that when it comes to the foundation for our life with God and our hope of
heaven—those things are garbage compared
to trusting in Christ and building our life with God and hope of heaven on that
firm foundation.
We must recognize
and say the same. We will not go to
heaven because our family was Christian or because we grew up in this congregation
or because we were nice folks who did our best.
When it comes to
making a way for us to God and going to heaven when we die—these things will
not suffice—eternity cannot be built on them.
There is only one
way for us to have a life with God that death will not end—only one way to go
to heaven--and that is through personal faith in Jesus.
Faith is the open
hand that God fills with the righteousness of Christ—but the only way FOR THAT to
happen is for our hand of faith to be empty of everything else: our heritage—our good works—our zeal and
faithfulness.
All of it must be
turned loose and dropped to the side—in Paul’s words “counted as loss”--so that
Christ and his righteousness may become ours by faith.
Paul wanted to grow
in his knowledge of Christ and become more deeply identified with Christ and
share in Christ’s life more and more. That
ought to be our goal too—for that is the narrow way that leads to eternal life
in heaven—that we …
— know (Christ) and
the power of his resurrection, and share his sufferings, becoming like him in
his death, that by any means possible (we) may attain the resurrection
from the dead.
When Paul met the
risen Christ on the Road to Damascus ,
Paul was blinded by what he saw. This
was the Lord’s powerful way of demonstrating to Paul that what he thought were
his spiritual insights-- were really spiritual blindness.
Where before Paul
had fixed his eyes of faith upon himself—who he was and what he had done—now he
would fix his eyes of faith upon Jesus---- and as he was filled with the Holy
Spirit, the Bible says that something like scales fell from his eyes as a powerful
sign from the Lord that only now—believing in Jesus—did Paul see things clearly
when it came to his life with God and hope of heaven.
So it is for every
person who comes to faith in Christ. We
see the painful truth about our own self-righteousness—that it cannot make a
way for us to God and eternal life. But
we also see the healing truth about Jesus-that his death and resurrection
really have made a way for us to God and earned our place in heaven.
It is that vision
that fills our eyes of faith for the rest of our lives. The Christian wants to know more and more
about Christ. We delight to hear his
story. We want to grow deeper in our
faith and trust. We want to grow closer
to him.
The death and
resurrection of Jesus is the central, defining reality of our lives. Not our heritage or our obedience—not our
zeal and faithfulness—but Christ alone becomes our life here on earth and our
hope of heaven.
So dramatic was
the change in Paul’s life through faith in Jesus that he went from being a
persecutor of Christ to a martyr for Christ.
He said that he wanted to share
in his sufferings and become like him in his death so that he could have a part
in his resurrection. His goal was to
attain the resurrection of the dead BY
ANY MEANS POSSIBLE—even if that meant hardship and suffering and death.
The way to heaven
went through the cross for Jesus and it would for Paul and so it does for every
believer. We identify with Jesus’ life
and follow him in taking up our cross and accepting the hardships and
difficulties and sacrifices that come with being a Christian.
We will be glad to
accept the Lord’s will—whatever that is—trusting that he is leading us through
death to life because he did the same for his Son Jesus. This is the confidence that Paul had as he
pressed on towards the goal of heaven.
He wrote:
Not that I have
already obtained this or am already perfect, but I press on to make it my own,
because Christ Jesus has made me his own.
Paul
wrote this letter about 30 years after he became a Christian. He traveled all over the known world
preaching the Gospel. He faced
imprisonment and shipwreck and beatings because of his faith. He served Christ faithfully.
But he knew about
himself that he still wasn’t everything that Christ had called him to be—that
God was still working in his life to form him in the image of Christ and fit
him for the glories of heaven.
So it is for
us. From the moment we came to faith,
God has been working in our lives to fit us for heaven and we are called by God
to live our lives in such a way that more and more we become the sons and
daughters that God has already declared us to be.
But we are able to
do this ONLY because Christ Jesus has already
made us his own. He has laid claim to
us, shedding his life’s blood as the ransom price he paid to set us free from
Satan and make us part of God’s family. His
resurrection has made a place for us in heaven where we will dwell with God and
the saints forever.
That is who we are-
and where we are going- because Jesus says that is who we are and where we are
going--even if we still have a long way to go before we reach our heavenly
home. Paul wrote:
Brothers, I do not
consider that I have made it my own. But one thing I do: forgetting what lies
behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for
the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.
Jesus completely
changed Paul’s life. Everything that
Paul regarded as central to his identity-who he was and what he had done—Paul
counted as less than nothing compared to knowing the greatness of God’s love
for him in Christ.
The sins that Paul
had committed—even persecuting Christ—no longer had any power over him to make
his feel guilty and ashamed because Christ had taken them away, nailing them to
the cross.
So it is for
us. All of us can look back at the past: the mistakes we have made—the missed
opportunities to do the right thing—the self-righteousness that stood in
judgment of others—with regrets.
But the amazing
and wonderful thing about our life with Christ is that the past is the past—we
don’t have to carry it around with us any longer—because Christ has carried in
to the cross and buried it away in his tomb—leaving it behind when he rose
again.
From this moment
on our gaze—our focus—our life is directed towards a new and glorious future
where day by day we are being shaped and molded into the people of God who will
one day live with him forever in heaven.
And so we press on
in our life of faith towards that goal of heaven and the prize of eternal life
just like a runner stretching forward towards the finish life—knowing that there
is a victor’s crown waiting for us when the race of faith is over. Amen.
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