God Will Finish What He Started

Posted by on January 6, 2008 under Sermons

  • Letters. Mail – Junk mail and solicitations
  • Our recent mailing …
  • Handwritten Note – from someone far away.

    The church in Philippi is assembled on the first day of the week. They have come together to worship and fellowship. They meet in a home, perhaps it is the home of a woman named Lydia. The church in this town started with Lydia and her household. They met with a missionary named Paul for a riverside prayer meeting. She and her family heard the good message that Paul was sharing and they were baptized. From that point forward she wanted to offer her resources to provide hospitality. She wanted others to share in her joy. Her life was changed and that’s why she’s here.

    All the church gathers in Lydia’s house surrounded by the tools of her trade – dye and fabric – and they have spread a table. Some have brought bread. Some have brought wine. They will eat together and remember Christ.

    Around the table are some of the Christians in Philippi: One brother is a jailer. He was charged with holding Paul and Silas when they were arrested in Philippi. He almost ended his life that night, but Paul and Silas stopped him. They shared the good news of Jesus with him. He and his family began new life that night. It changed his life and that’s why he’s here.

    I imagine that sitting near the jailer at the table is a girl who was a slave. She’s the reason Paul ended up in prison. She was once possessed by a spirit that enabled her to predict the future. Her owners used her gift to get rich. The first time she ever met Paul and Silas she recognized that they were servants of the Most High God. She knew that they had a message that would save people. Paul cast the the spirit out of this slave girl. That was good for her, but bad for her owners. They lost their income and that’s why they had Paul imprisoned. But the girl was set free. Her life was changed and that’s why she’s here.

    Also at the table is Clement, one of the leaders of the church and over on one side of the room is a woman named Eudodia. On the other side of the room is a woman named Syntyche. It’s a little tense when both of them are there. You see they have been at odds with each other and whatever is going on between them is starting to spill over to everyone else.

    But that’s pushed aside just a bit today because an old member who has been gone for a time has returned. Epaphroditus is here this Sunday. He has returned from his trip to deliver the congregation’s support for Paul, the missionary. He brings with him a letter from Paul. A message – handwritten.

    Everyone is listening intently. What will Paul say? What is his message? How is he doing? They believe in his mission to preach and teach the good news of Christ, but they had heard that he was imprisoned. Has he done something foolish? Why would he risk himself so? Will the mission continue? They have so much invested in it and they are anxious.

    Read Philippians 1:1-11.

    Paul was imprisoned and even though he had every reason to be anxious and doubtful, he was confident. He was confident that God was going to finish what he started. With or without Paul, God was going to complete the good work he had started in this Philippian congregation. The jailer, the slave girl, Lydia, Clement, Epaphroditus – even Euodia and Syntyche on opposite sides of the room – Paul was confident that God was going to do good works through them.

    Paul’s confidence is in the message of good news he preaches: news about God’s grace and his work in Christ to bring peace. Paul is in chains, but it is the gospel that’s on trial; and Paul has now doubt that the gospel will prevail. After all, the church in Philippi is living proof of the gospel’s power to change lives.

    Through his letter, Paul joins the Philippians in worship. He gives thanks for them. They have supported Paul so that he can tell more and more people about God’s good news. Paul prays for them. He wants the power of the gospel to continue to work in them so that they will grow and mature in love for one another. He wants them to be pure and blameless, ready for the day when Christ completes the work he started.

    All of this is just the opening of the letter …

    Philippians is a letter from Paul to a church that was close to his heart. When we read it, we are reading someone else’s mail. But long ago the church realized that the letter is a word to us too. As your preacher, it is my task to preach that word …

    First, I am confident that God is able to complete the good work he has started in us. God has plans for this congregation and I want to see those plans bear fruit. I think you do too. We may be very different and we may even disagree about a few things. We can get anxious about that or we can see ourselves as partners in God’s mission. Think about it, God can and will work his purposes through us. That’s huge! We can turn away from God, but he will not abandon us no matter how difficult our situation may be. He will complete the good works he started.

    Second, let us all be confident in the power of the gospel. We often think of the gospel as something that can change the lives of others. Do we ever stop and think about how it changes us? Do we think about how it has changed us? Two months ago, Phil Slate was here for Mission Sunday. He asked to consider what our lives would be like if we didn’t know Christ. That’s a sobering reflection. Let us also reflect on how the gospel continues to change our lives and our life together.

    Third, I am thankful for this church. I am thankful for the opportunity to serve Christ with you. I am thankful for the kindness you have shown me and my family. My hope is that we will grow in the year ahead and in the years ahead.

    • I hope that we will grow in love. Not a sentimental kindness that keeps the peace, but an honest, forbearing love that makes peace.
    • I hope that we will grow in our understanding and experience of what really matters, so that we may live pure and blameless lives until the day of Christ’s return. A pure and blameless life is one that doesn’t stumble and doesn’t cause others to stumble. It brings glory and praise to God.

    Please join me in this hope. Please join me in the confidence that God will finish what he started in us. We belong to Christ. He loves us and can do so much in us. How much do we love Christ?

  • Faith Is …

    Posted by on January 3, 2008 under Bulletin Articles

    Faith is a spiritual journey towards spiritual maturity, not an achieved destination. It is companion to the spiritual maturation process of the individual who commits self to Jesus Christ (1 Peter 2:1-3). Though faith is constantly “the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen” each step of the journey, the nature of that assurance or conviction changes as the person matures in Christ.

    May I suggest several maturing steps that frequently occur in the life of a person in Jesus Christ. In these steps faith grows as the person spiritually grows.

    1. The person comes to the conviction that he/she (a) needs to be saved from sin and (b) God through Jesus Christ can save from the consequence of sin. This level of faith gladly commits to God and Christ through repentance and baptism (Acts 2:38). However, this is just the beginning.

    2. The saved person grows to the conviction that he/she must show his/her gratitude for salvation by making self available to God’s purposes. The result: he/she serves God’s purposes in any way he/she is capable in the full confidence that God rewards (Hebrews 11:6). However, this is only a step, not a destination.

    3. Increasingly, there is the awareness that serving His purposes is rightfully God’s expectation, not some special gift the saved person gives God (Ephesians 2:10; the examples of Hebrews 11:7-12). God promised, and people of faith responded by trusting His promise-by building an ark, going to a strange place, or having a child when conception was impossible. Still, this is but a step, not a faith destination.

    4. Then the person grasps on a deeper level that salvation is the result of what God did in Jesus’ cross and resurrection, not the result of any personal sacrifice made or service performed. There is a new insight into the declaration, “It is about God, not about me” (Hebrews 11:39, 40). He/she marvels anew at people who trusted God’s promise without receiving the result of the promise. This, too, is merely a step, not a destination.

    5. If all this makes you wonder about the nature of faith in God, ask an elderly, dying person who spent life living by faith, “How does faith express itself?” The answers may astound you.

    Faith is not the product of human confidence in self or human confidence in “our” deeds. It is the expression of confidence in the God of mercy and grace who saves those who can never make themselves deserving.

    Grow in God, and let your faith grow as you spiritually develop!