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PhilippiansRead Philippians 1-3:16 The letter to the church at Philippi is written from Paul and Timothy, while the apostle is in prison. Paul is concerned that some "proclaim Christ in a jealous and quarrelsome spirit" because they "are moved by selfish ambition and present Christ from mixed motives." Who are these "dogs" who are causing the apostle such distress? Once again, they are Jewish Christians who insist on circumcision, which Paul scathingly refers to as "mutilation." The vehemence of Paul's attack on these Jewish Christians is reprehensible and should not be confused with the word of God. Paul reminds the Christians at Philippi that he has as much right as any Jew to assert his authority on the basis of keeping the Jewish law. "If anyone makes claims of that kind, I can make a stronger case for myself: circumcised on my eighth day, Israelite by race, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew born and bred; in my practice of the law a Pharisee, in zeal for religion a persecutor of the church, by the law's standard of righteousness without fault." But Paul renounces any such claim as "so much rubbish, for the sake of gaining Christ and finding myself in union with him, with no righteousness of my own based on the law, nothing but the righteousness which comes from faith in Christ, given by God in response to faith." Clearly, Jewish Christians are pressing the churches to keep
the Jewish law as a way of becoming holy and perfect in the sight of God. This
is, after all, what the scriptures say, for the only scriptures in the church
during Paul's ministry are the Jewish scriptures. Furthermore, it would seem that the
Jewish We see in the letter to the Philippians another contrast between Paul's teachings and the message of the Jewish Christian church in Jerusalem. Paul emphasizes that he has not "yet reached perfection." It seems that those who oppose him claim to have perfected their lives. When we read the gospel of Matthew, we will see that this appeal to "be perfect" is powerfully presented as the teaching of Jesus. For Paul, the kingdom of God has not yet come but will come soon. For the Jewish Christians in Jerusalem, however, it seems the kingdom of God has already come, as the manifestations of the Spirit attest. Therefore, they no longer work as they once did for their living, but survive on the contributions of others. They are not anxious about the future but spend their time in prayer and fellowship with one another, as they wait for the day of the Lord. Questions: 1) Are you surprised, and perhaps shocked, to hear such spiteful language from Paul about other Christians? 2) Did you realize that was trained in Jewish law as a Pharisee? Does he criticize the Pharisees the way that the gospels do? Why not? 3) Can you see that Christian communal sharing in Jerusalem was a means of resisting imperial oppression? If you were taxed unfairly, might you try to live through sharing and barter to avoid taxation?
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