Sunday, May 6, 2018

Modelling Thankfulness - Philippians 1:1-18a


Philippians 1:1-18a
When I was in college, someone once told me that she did not believe that being a part of a church was important because the Bible talks very little about church. She explained that Jesus never went to church, nor did Jesus ever teach about church. Church was a human institution created by humans to co-opt the power of individual Christians, and tell us what to think and how to believe. I think she may have even said, that the Church was created to take our money, money we could be given directly to those who needed it instead of being used to build buildings and pay pastors.
She told me that because Jesus never spoke about the Church and because it was never mentioned in the Gospels that the institution of the Church was unbiblical. At the time her argument that Jesus was never went to church, was a part of a church, or taught about the Church seemed to be a fair point, although even then it unsettled me think. After all I was in college studying to be a pastor which assumed that I would be one of these pastors participating in what she seemed to believe was this unbiblical endeavor call the Church.
Although I might have been swayed by her arguments at the time, they are really unfounded. Although Jesus never went to church, there is Biblical record of him teaching in the synagogues and since the Church was founded on teaching salvation through the life and death of Jesus, they simply did not exist for Jesus to attend prior to his resurrection. So attending synagogue would be the “biblical” equivalent. If the gospel accounts are in any way true (which of course we believe them to be), Jesus attended synagogue often, at one point they tell us that Jesus went into the synagogue, “as was his habit”.
But not only did Jesus do the next best thing to attending Church, all of his disciples founded churches and participated in early church councils. Peter is the leader of the Church in Jerusalem. Acts tells us about various churches that were started by the disciples as they sought to be witnesses for Christ in Jerusalem, Judea and to the ends of the earth. Going, preaching and scattering Churches all over the known world is what entirety of Acts is about.
 The idea of believers doing this Christian life together is very much a part of the foundational understanding upon which most of the New Testament is written. The majority of the New Testament is written to churches and addresses issues that were facing the early Church. In Acts the disciples and Paul all start Churches and then most of the rest of the New Testament is made up of correspondence sent to these Churches, meant to be read by Churches, giving them instructions on how to better be “the Church.”
The church is the assumed basic building block of the Christians life. Life is quite simply not incorporeal; you gotta have a body to be alive. The Christians life is also not incorporeal; the Church is the body that makes Christian life possible.  Being a part of a church is quite simply not an option for us as Christians.
Paul addresses this letter to all the saints in Philippi; that is to the Church that is established in that city and all the people who make up that Church. He begins by calling them saints. This is a word which for a fair part of Christian history was reserved for the deeply pious, the extraordinarily religious; for Christians who seemed to somehow not merely be steps above the rest of us, but several flights, perhaps even floors. But this is not the original meaning. We were once all saints; all those who were a part of the Church, gathered and working to further the gospel and the kingdom in our lives and through our examples. When Paul speaks to the saints in Philippi he is addressing all the Christians in that city. 
The fellowship of believers is one of the many ways which Paul talks about churches in the various places to which he writes. Fellowship for Paul is not the congeniality that is shared between people who like each other, nor is it about shared good times that occur between friends and acquaintances. It is a partnership in mission, a coming together because of the gospel and the furthering of the kingdom. This partnering in mission seeks to advance the gospel in all things; coming together for mutual benefit, for encouragement and strength that can be found in community. More importantly this fellowship is about the sharing of the grace of God, participation in the gospel of Christ by being the means by which the kingdom is furthered and shared. This fellowship invites all those who participate in Christ to come together for a shared calling, to evangelism, giving and prayer for others and a lifestyle that embodies the grace, love and mercy of God.  This fellowship, this thing we call Church is the backbone of the Christian life.
Paul always speaks to the Church, the gathering of saints, the fellowship and in his relationship with them he models an attitude of gratitude, expressing his thankfulness for all of them. He tells them that he is thankful for them generally, expressing that he thanks God every time he remembers them. The feeling is that they are never forgotten, since he also says that he prays for them constantly. And since they are never forgotten he is continually thankful for them and continually thanks God for them.
But he is not simply thankful for them as a whole, he is thankful for each of them; thankful for them individually. He thanks God for each of them praying with joy for them as individuals. He is not merely thankful for them as a group, as a church, but he is thankful for each of them as persons. For what each one contributes to his life and to the life of the community. It not simply “people” for whom Paul is thankful, but it is persons. This is also evident in the introductions and conclusions of Paul’s letters in which he will often not only greet certain people by name but thank them for the work they are doing alongside of him for Christ. He is thankful for the persons who because of their commitment to Christ are partners with him in the Gospel.
He is also specific in his thankfulness, he is not merely generally thankful for the people of the Church in Philippi, but he is thank for specific reasons, for the things they have done and are doing. He tells them what it is they are doing for which he is thankful. In a way this lets them know his thankfulness is genuine and also lets them know which practices and behaviors to continue. He lets them know right up front at the beginning of his correspondence to them, what they are doing right.  Paul tells them that he is thankful because of their sharing of the Gospel. They are faithful sharers of the gospel and Paul is thankful for all the ways they are continually sharing the gospel, in all things at all times.  Paul is also thankful that they hold him in their hearts and because they share God’s grace with him, presumably by supporting him and his ministry, and this is especially needed as he is currently in house arrest and their assistance provides for his daily needs.
As we move through our lives as Christians, Paul is our example of thankfulness.  Paul in his letters, models for us what it looks like to be thankful for other Christians in Christ’s church. As we look around this room today we see other Christians and I am sure if we thought about it we could tell ourselves we are thankful for the people in this room, for this Church and who we are together. For the work and the ministry and the impact this Church as had on your life. And often times many of you share this thankfulness during our prayer time. By doing this you are not only telling God that you are thankful for this Church and its presence in your life, but because it is a communal prayer, you are also telling those around you that you are thankful for this body, for the presence and the life of this Church in your life.
One things we should remember is that we are not thankful because this Church is perfect, or because it is everything we wish is was, at all times. But our thankfulness is come out of who this Church is, even in its weaknesses and failings. Our Church, any Church does not need to be perfect for us to be thankful for it. It simply needs to be the Church in which God has placed us, through which God is ministering to us, and in which we are able to labor together for the sake of the Gospel and the kingdom.  
And my guess is that not only are you thankful for the group of people that make up the church you attend regularly, but you are thankful for the persons who are a part of the body of Christ. You know people who have touched your life, without whose love and support you would not be the Christian you are today. My guess is there are saints of God's church who have touched your life in a small, or perhaps in a great way.  Even if you have never expressed it or not good are not good at telling others, you are thankful for the presence of these people in your life. So here is the thing I want you to think of one person. I want you to think about ways in which you are thankful for that person, for what they do in in and for the Church, and for ways their faith has made your faith stronger. I want you to think of a specific ways you are thankful for this person. Now want you grab a piece of paper, a card, something and write it down.  Go ahead, do it right now. The amazing thing about blogs is that they don't go anywhere when you step away. I will be here when you get back. Write down how you are thank for this person, specifically, things they have done to help you in your faith journey, ways they have encouraged you, given your strength, been there for you when you really needed them.
Now send the card, put it in an email and send that, give them a call and tell them, hey, you can even go to their house, or where ever they are right now, give them a big hug and let them know exactly how thankful you are for them. Take time today to model the kind of gratitude Paul modeled for us. At other times Paul has called for us to follow him as he follows Christ and this is a real way we can do that today. Give thanks, be thankful for the Christians God has put in you life and let them know exactly how thankful you are. 




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