Dr. Jack L. Arnold Equipping
Pastors International Philippians
Lesson 14
The Subtlety
of Error
Philippians 3:15-21
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Doctrinal
accuracy is very important, for what we do in practice is directly related to
what we believe. Error in doctrine
does not usually come overnight but it creeps in on a person very subtly. This is why it is crucial for
Christians to know their Bible, for the final criterion for checking all
doctrine or experience is the Bible.
B. Doctrinal
error, concerning sin and grace, was making inroads into the Church of
Philippi. The threat was in the
area of legalism and libertinism.
Both of these extremes would be detrimental to the Philippian Christians.
C. In
chapter three, the first error Paul warns against is that of the legalism of the
Judaizers (Phil. 3:2: Watch out for
those dogs, those men who do evil, those mutilators of the flesh.). These Judaizers were legalists because
they taught salvation and sanctification were not by grace through faith in
Christ alone but belief in Christ PLUS circumcision, keeping of ceremonial law
and adherence to Jewish man-made custom, tradition and ritual. Remember, these Judaizers claimed to be
followers of Christ. Yet they were
in error because they were adding some form of works to salvation or Christian
living. NOTE. What motivated these legalists? They were motivated by the fear of
change. For the first seven
years of the New Testament church, there were only converted Jews to
Christ. These Christian-Jews had
hundreds of years of Jewish tradition behind them. A Jew was told never to mingle with Gentiles, never to eat
their foods, never adopt their culture and never worship their gods. A revered Jew was one who stayed
faithful to Judaism regardless of the influence of the Gentile pagan culture. Those who were able to isolate and
insulate themselves from pagan forces were the truly dedicated and committed
Jews. These early Christian-Jews
maintained their Jewishness but loved Christ within the Jewish culture. Yet, there were false Jewish-Christians
who claimed to be followers of Christ but insisted that all Gentiles become
like Jews in order to be saved.
They were Judaizers. True
Christian-Jews and false Jewish-Christians were all alarmed when, after fifteen
years or so, they saw all these Gentiles turning to Christ, bringing with them
much of their pagan culture which the Jew was trained to hate. They feared that these converted
Gentiles would destroy their Jewish culture. True Christian-Jews struggled with the change but ultimately
made it but the false Jewish-Christians could not make the change so they
devised a system of legalism to restrain what they thought was the lawlessness
of the Gentiles entering into their culture. Their system was to make all Gentile converts to be Jews by law,
by tradition and by custom. If
Gentiles wanted to follow Christ, they had to become Jews in a cultural
sense. These Judaizers were driven
by the fear of change because they were threatened by
the influx of Gentiles into the visible Christian church. They were frightened that pagans or
pagan influences might take over the church. The only way they knew to stop Gentile influences was to
counteract it with legalistic rules which were not
biblical. The legalists were
reacting to what they thought was the lawlessness of the Gentiles. They saw legalism as a safeguard to
preserving their own Jewish culture within the church. These Judaizers went too far and subtly
slipped into the error of legalism, making them false teachers.
We
may not be able to identify with the Jew-Gentile problem within the church but
perhaps we can identify with something a little more contemporary. Suppose our church had an influx of
Hippies into the church. Soon it
became obvious that they were a large block in the church and growing. We were not adjusted to their style of
dress, their taste for music, and their modes of worship. They also began to bring their unsaved
friends to church and we could detect the smell of marijuana in the church
sanctuary. It would appear that
they would grow large enough to take over the church. This would be distressing for all of us. The establishment in the church would
insist that some type of restraining force be put upon this distressing
situation. They would say, ÒDonÕt
you think we should pass some rules to keep these people in line, have a dress
code and insist that the hair be cut above the ears? Out of fear of change, there would be a drift towards
legalism, believing that legalism would be a safeguard when really it is just a
reaction to change. The Christian
thing to do is accept these people and accept the change that comes with it,
providing the change is scriptural.
II. ERROR
OF SINLESS PERFECTION or DECEIVED CITIZENS 3:15-17
A. Last
week we saw how Paul refuted the doctrine of sinless perfectionism using his
own life as an example. He claimed
that perfection could only be reached in eternity and that he in his own
experience could only reach relative maturity. Yet, he pushed on in his life towards the goal of perfection,
experiencing progressive victory over sin, fear and doubt in his daily
life. As a Christian, Paul forgot
things behind him and stretched forth to attain a deeper fellowship with Christ which would ultimately lead him to the goal of
perfect fellowship and sinless perfection in eternity (Phil. 3:10-14)
B. All
of us who are mature should take such a view of things. – The legalistic
Judaizers thought they were mature or perfect because they had attained to
their own standard of man-made righteousness. But Paul says a mature Christian is one who has the same
attitude about progressive sanctification as Paul. The mature believer understands the necessity of pushing on
in the Christian life, always stretching forward for Christ and not looking
back at failures or successes. The
mature Christian sees legalism of any kind as inadequate to save or
sanctify. The mature Christian
sees there is a constant need for a deeper walk with Christ. The mature Christian knows the
Christian life is ultimately a coming to know intimately, personally and
dynamically Jesus Christ and maintaining that relationship daily.
John
Newton, the great Puritan preacher of days gone by also expressed in his life
the desire of the Apostle Paul:
ÒI am not what I ought to be; I am not what
I want to be; I am not what I hope to be in another world, but still I am not
what I once use to be, and by GodÕs grace I am what I am.Ó
C. And
if on some point you think differently, that too God will make clear to
you. Paul says those in
the Philippian church, who had fallen into the error of legalism or sinless
perfection, would be dealt with by God not by him. At this point, Paul could have become very legalistic
himself saying, ÒSince you donÕt agree with me, IÕm going to give you a list of
doÕs and donÕts which will force you to think my way.Ó This approach would have made Paul a
legalist himself. But his
attitude is very loving. He says
God will reveal this error to them.
There were deceived brothers and sisters in Christ and they needed
understanding from God on the matter of sanctification. God would make the matter known to them
but would the knowledge be headed?
They had to be ready to change if God showed them the error of their
legalistic ways. In order to
change, they would have to stop being critical, harsh, negative and judgmental
of their brethren who did not think just exactly like them. Paul believed God was able to change
these Philippians who had fallen into error. NOTE. All
Christians have everything there is to know. All of us are confused about certain areas of our Christian
life. All of us resist the Lord in
some areas. God will show us the
error of our way, and when he does we must be willing to change.
D. Only
let us live up to what we have already attained. – However far
these Philippians had come in their spiritual maturity, they were not to rest
on their laurels. They were to
move on, for they were still a long way from perfection. The song ÒHigher GroundÓ expresses the
desire of the Apostle Paul:
ÒIÕm pressing on the upward way,
New
heights IÕm gaining every day;
Still
praying as I onward bound,
Lord,
plant my feet on higher ground.
Lord,
lift me up and let me stand,
By
Faith, on heavenÕs table-land,
A
higher plane than I have found;
Lord
plant my feet on higher ground.Ó
E. Join
with others in following my example, brothers – The Philippians
were to imitate PaulÕs life in the area of progressive sanctification. Paul was an illustration of a saved man
who still struggled with sin in his life.
Paul failed many times but he did not let that stop him. He knew about GodÕs grace in the
sanctification process. Therefore,
he confessed his sins and got up and kept moving for Christ. NOTE. We need Christians today like Paul who will say, ÒFollow me
as I follow the Lord!Ó But in
order to say it a person has to live it.
How are we to follow the example of Paul? 1) By not trying to please God
in the power of the flesh but in the power of the Holy Spirit; 2) By not
turning to legalism to control our lives but to Christ and His moral law. 3) By being convinced that we have not
yet arrived spiritually and we must push on; 4) By
striving to live a diligent and disciplined life for Christ. NOTE: Paul says, ÒJoin with othersÓ. We need to choose to be influenced by Christians who are
walking in faith. The people we
Òhang out withÓ will influence us.
When we are discouraged, find ourselves losing hope, are stagnant in our
Christian walk, then we ought to Òhang outÓ with people who will influence us
for Christ, for godliness, for holiness of life. Choose some Christian who is worth emulating. Let your life be influenced by one who
is mature.
F. And
take note of those who live according to the pattern we gave you. – Paul
tells these Philippians to Òtake noteÓ or Òmark outÓ those who followed the
example of Paul. The Philippians
were to follow these people. Paul
says in essence, ÒDonÕt follow everyone.
Follow those who follow the Lord.
Follow the Apostolic example.Ó
Christians are to follow those men or women who follow the Lord.
Christians need examples
to follow. Observe the average
American teenager. Who are his
examples? Who are his idols? Some macho-man on a motorcycle. Some athlete who is carnal. Some rock star who blatantly sings
and lives immorally. Some movie star who portrays a sexual image. Why not follow some real heroes and
pattern yourself after MosesÕ leadership, DanielÕs wisdom, JosephÕs kindness,
AbrahamÕs faith, JobÕs patience, PaulÕs zeal. Why not follow Martin Luther who when
before the Diet of Worms said, ÒIt is a dangerous thing to go against my
conscience. I will not recant. Here I stand. God help me!Ó
Why not follow a George Mueller who lived a life of prayer. Let these men be your idols so you can
say, ÒFollow me as I follow the Lord.Ó
III. ERROR OF LIBERTINISM
or FALSE CITIZENS 3:18-19
Not only was legalism and
perfectionism an error in the Philippian church but so
was libertinism. The libertines
were antinomians (those against law) and they were in reaction to the
legalists. These were professing
Christians who believed that once they had trusted Christ, they could live as
they please. They asked the
question, ÒShall we go on sinning that grace may abound and they answered,
ÒYes!Ó They threw out the moral
law under the guise of grace and were living in rank sin. They were willfully sinning saying that
God would give them more grace.
This, of course, is not a matter of Christian liberty. This is a matter of blatant sin and
rebellion to the moral law of God.
Christian liberty deals with things not specifically commanded against
in scripture, but libertinism violates the commands of God, twisting the
teaching of the grace of God.
These libertines were guilty of antinomianism which
is rebellion against the moral law of God.
A. For I
have often told you before and now I saw again even with tears, many live as
enemies of the cross of Christ. – These libertines were not
outside the visible church but within it.
How were they enemies of the cross? They were turning the grace of God into lasciviousness. They said Christ died for their sins
but went right on sinning. Christ
died that His people might not serve sin any longer, yet these libertines were
using the cross as an excuse to sin.
They reasoned, ÒIf Christ died for all my sins (past, present and
future) then I can keep on sinning because through his death I will be
forgiven.Ó NOTE. Yet, the Bible teaches just the
opposite. In Titus 2:11, 12 it
say, ÒFor the grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men. It teaches us to say ÒNoÓ to
ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and
godly lives in this present age.Ó
In Titus 2:14 it says, ÒJesus Christ, who gave himself for us to redeem
us from all wickedness and purify for himself a people that are his very own,
eager to do what is good.Ó
NOTE. A false teaching which is so common in our American Christendom today
is, ÒWhat really delivered me was when I found out Jesus loves me no matter how
I live.Ó That simply is not
true. John 14:21 says, ÒWhoever has my commandments and obeys them, he is the
one who loves me. He who loves me
will be loved by my Father, and I too will love him and show myself to
him.Ó If a person professes Christ
and yet has no desire to love Christ and hate sin, there is no basis to call
that person a Christian.
NOTE. Those who pretend to
be on the side of Christ but are not, do more harm to the cause of Christ than
open scoffers. These hypocrites
masquerade as believers but all the while despise the moral law of God and true
holiness.
A.
Their destiny
is destruction; -- The ultimate
end for the charlatan Christians will be hell, not quick annihilation but
everlasting destruction. Why their
destruction? Because they never
really appropriated Christ into their lives as Savior from sin. No matter what these phony Christians
believe, they will one day hear the words, ÒDepart from me, you who are cursed
into eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels.Ó
B.
Their god is
their stomach, -- These
libertines had accepted the Epicurean philosophy of life with a Christian
flavoring, ÒEat, drink and be merry for tomorrow we die.Ó They worshipped what could be felt and
touched. They reasoned that Christ
is love; therefore, He will overlook how they live now. Libertines live to satisfy the lusts of
the body. They lived for the
sensual experience of the moment.
They live to eat, to drink, to have pleasure, to indulge in orgies and
to do anything that pleases the flesh.
Their motto is, ÒIf it feels good, do it.Ó Gluttony, drunkenness, sexual immorality, adultery,
homosexuality and pleasure seeking is their lifestyle. They saturate themselves with all the
physical experiences of life and call themselves Christian. They worship the sensual nature and
their existence is one of self-gratification.
C.
Libertines are
all about us in the modern day visible church. We call them liberals.
These professing liberals support free sex and alternate homosexual lifestyles. Many professing Christians push hard
for abortions because they feel that a mother has the right to live her own
life as she pleases. If the unborn
child is an inconvenience to her, then she has the right to abort it. One million three hundred thousand
abortions are performed each year in the USA which is nothing but a
gratification of self. Abortion is
murder. Professing Christians who
support wholesale abortion are headed for destruction no matter what they
profess. Libertines attack the family,
saying if marriage is too tough, get out and get a divorce. This is gratification of self.
Today courses are taught
in so-called Christian based colleges on subjects such as group marriages, mate
swapping, sex outside of marriage, homosexual marriages,
communal families and many other perversions to destroy the family ordained by
God. These things are taught so
men can gratify the cravings of their flesh. Their god is their belly. Their stomach is their idol. They worship whatever is pleasing and self-indulgent.
E. And
their glory is their shame. – Libertines glory in things they
should be ashamed of but they do not care. What should make them blush, they actually boast about. They brag about being the most drunk person at the party. They are proud of eating until stuffed. They boast of how many affairs they
have had. They vaunt themselves as
progressives because they have had a number of abortions. They pride themselves on being broadminded, they justify themselves by saying their behavior
is proper and allowable. Yet, true
Christians can never be tolerant with sin. True Christians are ashamed of sin and seek to deal with it
in their lives.
F. Their mind is on earth things
– These false citizens of heaven, these charlatans, these
hypocrites only ponder the things of the flesh and not spiritual things proving
by their actions they are only
professing Christians not possessing Christians.
One time a convert of D. L. Moody, who was
inebriated, said to him ÒMisher, Moody, donÕt shu rememer me? IÕm your convert.Ó Mr. Moody quickly replied, ÒYou must be
my convert, not the LordÕs convert, for you do not give evidence of salvation.Ó
IV. ERROR REPUDIATED
or TRUE CITIZENS 3:20-21
A. But
our citizenship is in heaven. – Paul contrasts true Christians
and false Christians. Every person
who lived in Philippi was a citizen of Rome, for it was a Roman colony. For them, their capitol was in Rome. They took orders from a distant
city. Christians are earthly
citizens but are also heavenly citizens.
Christians serve their King, Jesus Christ. Their laws for living on earth come from the distant
heavenly city. As citizens of
heaven, Christians are ambassadors for Christ. The ChristianÕs lifestyle and value system is built on the
fact that we will not be here forever.
We are one day going to be with Christ but right now we are citizens of
His spiritual kingdom. Our whole
style of living should be regulated by the fact we are heavenly citizens. Libertines live only for the present,
the ÒnowÓ experience. Christians
live for the future when they will be with Christ. As the hymn writer said, ÒThis world is not my own. IÕm just a passing through. If heavens not my home, what on this
earth will I do.Ó
B. And
we eagerly await a Savior from here, the Lord Jesus Christ. –
While living on the earth, the true Christian looks for the second coming of
Jesus Christ. Christians are
characterized by a constant hope of ChristÕs coming. The anticipation of the LordÕs return helps the Christian
live a godly, separated life. (1
John 3:2-3: Dear friends, now we
are children of God, and what we will be has not yet been made known. But we know that when he appears, we
shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is. Everyone who has this hope in him purifies himself, just as
he is pure.).
Lord Shaftsberry who was a
great Christian English social reformer said at the near end of his
life, ÒI do not think that in the last forty years I have lived one conscious
hour that was not influenced by our LordÕs return.Ó
C. Who,
by the power that enables him to bring everything under his control, will
transform our lowly bodies so they will be like his glorious body.
– Christians eagerly await the second coming because that is when they
will get sinless, perfect, resurrected and glorified bodies. At that time, the Christian will
experience perfection – a perfect heart, a perfect will, a perfect body
and a perfect mind. Oh, what glory
that will be! That will be heaven
for me!
V. APPLICATIONS: How can we detect libertinism in our
lives? What is the test for
libertinism?
A. What
are your priorities? What things
are important to us? Do we desire
earthly things or heavenly things?
Are our appetites carnal or spiritual? Do we live for the eternal or the temporal? Are we seeking the kingdom of God and
His righteousness or are we seeking our own self-gratification?
B. Are
we anxiously anticipating the return of Christ! Or do we say, ÒDonÕt come back Lord until I get married, or
get that big promotion, or make it big in my business, or get my new
house!Ó Do we think the return of
Christ will interfere with our plans?
C. Are
we giving orders to your body or is it giving orders to us? Paul, who
understood Christian liberty, was also a very disciplined person.
D. Do we
have godly heroes or carnal ones?
Are we patterning our lives after Christ and other godly men and women
who follow Christ?
E. Do
we abuse our Christian liberties causing others Christians to stumble? Are we more concerned about satisfying
our flesh than loving our brother?
V. CONCLUSION
A. When
Paul saw the lost condition of men and women within the visible church, he
wept. He wept for the lost outside
the church but he wept even more for men and women who knew about Christ but
did not know Christ.
B. Do
you know Christ? Surely your end
will be eternal destruction if you die without Christ as Savior and Lord. Do not trust your baptism. Do not trust church membership. Do not trust the fact that you have
been raised in a Christian home.
Trust only in Christ. He is
the only way to heaven.
C. Christ
will forgive any and all sins you have ever committed. HE died for sinners that they might not
serve sin any longer. If you will
come to Christ by faith, He will forgive you, grant you eternal life and give
you a dynamic purpose for living.
Trust Christ and really live!