I am by no means a musical expert. In middle school, as a sort of joke, I played clarinet in band class as a school elective credit (It was bad). However, the band Hillsong United has a song called "Forever Reign" that I highly recommend. The main chorus states "I'm running into your arms, the riches of your love will always be enough. Nothing compares to your embrace, light of the world forever reign!" Truer lyrics have never been spoken. The link is listed below...
When I think of Paul's imperative exhortation to the Philippian believers to "Rejoice in the Lord!" in Philippians 3:1, I imagine running. This image became real to me over the 4th of July week when I went up to Birmingham, Alabama, and upon arriving at my destination witnessed two boys, 5 and 3, upon exiting the car, run into the arms of their aunt and tackle her out of their excitement. As I witnessed this unabashed happiness, I felt myself experiencing the feeling of joy that comes from the Lord when we are resting in him and are able to see something truly beautiful occur.
Unfortunately joyful moments are surrounded by many painful ones. Difficult circumstances arise in our lives that cause the joy we have received in Christ to be difficult to see. For the Philippians, their difficult circumstances came from the spiritual opposition of the Judaizers. The
Judaizers were men who claimed to know God through their outward signs of religious practice, but were communicating doctrine or teachings that were untrue in regards to how to know God. A clear example of this would have been the physical act of circumcision, which these teachers claimed had to be performed in order to assure a person's salvation. Today, we face opposition from numerous sources. Any teaching that commands that we must add to the work of Jesus Christ in order to be saved is false doctrine and is untrue!
Paul speaks strongly to this point when he urges the
Philippians in 3:2 to look out for the dogs, look out for the
evildoers, look out for those who mutilate the flesh. These were strong
words against those false teachers, words that incriminated the teachers as
dogs or irreverent to the true holiness of God’s character. Paul uses the
description of dogs to communicate the idea that these men’s attempts at
religious obedience were filthy in the sight of a holy God, similar to how dogs
will often role around in their own filth. Paul also claimed that those false
teachers were evil or wicked, purposefully trying to confuse and manipulate
people’s minds in order to justify their own actions. Essentially, the
Philippian church faced a difficult set of circumstances by these false
teachers that made the joy found in Christ difficult to see. What circumstances in your life have made
you unsure if God was really true, really present, really worth worshipping?
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