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Following Godly Examples

Grace To You / John MacArthur
The Truth Network Radio
April 16, 2026 4:00 am

Following Godly Examples

Grace To You / John MacArthur

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April 16, 2026 4:00 am

The pursuit of Christ-likeness is the goal of the Christian life, and it requires following the example of others who are striving for the same goal, including the Apostle Paul, who modeled a life of virtue and humility. The Holy Spirit has the power to move us into the image of Christ, but we need to yield to His guidance and follow the pattern of godly leaders who can show us the way.

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Christ is the goal. Scripture reveals what he's like. The Spirit of God has the power to move you into his image. Paul has given you a path to follow. The church is to put flesh and blood leadership in your view that you can observe very closely in order to see how to walk.

Welcome to Grace to You with the Bible teaching of John MacArthur. I'm your host, Phil Johnson. To finish the 26.2 miles of a marathon, you definitely need some serious training. Imagine then what it takes to run the race that Philippians chapter 3 describes, a race that's going to last the rest of your life. Today on Grace TU, John MacArthur shows you how to strengthen your spiritual muscles, how to build endurance, how to run to win no matter what obstacles you might face.

John's current series is called Reaching for the Prize.

So if you have your Bible, turn to Philippians chapter 3 as John begins today's lesson. Philippians chapter 3 verses 17 to 21. Brethren Join in following my example. and observe those who walk according to the pattern you have in us. For many walk, of whom I often told you, and now tell you even weeping, that they are enemies of the cross of Christ.

whose end is destruction, whose God is their appetite, and whose glory is in their shame, who set their minds on earthly things. For our citizenship is in heaven. From which also we eagerly wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ. Who will transform the body of our humble state into conformity with the body of His glory? By the exertion of the power that he has, even to subject all things.

to himself.

Now this great and thrilling passage, as I said, continues the theme of pursuing the prize. It focuses us back on that which we discussed in detail in our last message, and that is that the goal of the Christian life is to be like Jesus Christ. And if I might remind you of that very simple and basic truth. You might say to yourself, that seems basic enough. Is it necessary for us even to be reminded?

And my response to that is, I think so. In this very complex Christian culture in which we live, Where there are so many viewpoints and so many. Theologies and so many seminars, and so many formulas, and so many exercises, quote unquote, in Christian growth.

Sometimes I think we can totally cloud the real issues. Spiritual living, the Christian life. is a process of pursuing Christ-likeness. The Christian life Is a process of pursuing Christ-likeness. That, in simple terms, is the direction of the whole matter of sanctification.

That is the goal. That is the thing which we pursue. That is the purpose of our time here, and that is the pursuit of our sanctification. It then becomes the lifelong objective of every Christian to become more and more and more like Jesus Christ. That is as basic as it can be stated.

Now As you come to verse 17, Paul wants to get practical. And he suggests to us that there are three necessary elements in this pursuit. That will enhance us. As we Pursue. Three things that are necessary for pursuing Christ's likeness.

Number one, Following after examples, Number two. Fleeing from enemies, and number three, fixing on expectations. Those are the three things he deals with in verses 17 to 21. Following after examples, fleeing from enemies, and fixing on expectations. Let's look at number one.

If I am to pursue this goal of Christ-likeness, Then I need to follow Some example to show me how. Look at verse 17. Brethren, join in following my example and observe those who walk according to the pattern you have in us.

Now that whole verse is just about Follow others who are pursuing this prize.

Now, let me talk to you about that for just a moment. I want you to understand it. First of all, Paul is not putting himself on a pedestal. not a pedestal of perfection. Paul is not saying, I'm perfect, be like me.

What Paul is saying is, I'm imperfect, follow the way I move toward that perfection. If I were to climb a high mountain, a dangerous climbing expedition alone. Which is a very remote possibility, folks. But should it occur? There is a little adventure in me.

And I should decide to climb this mountain. And I should get equipped with all the stuff you need to climb this precarious precipice. Of what significance would it be for a helicopter to fly across the peak of that thing and drop some guy on the top? And have that guy up there looking down and shouting, I'm up here, this is where you want to come. If you can just get up here, this is the top.

And I'm looking up. And I'm down here and he's up there. The problem is, he got up there by a helicopter, and he doesn't know the way up either. He hasn't gone that route. He is not of much help to me.

In fact, the more he hollers at me on the way up, the more frustrating it will become. What I would rather have Is some guy ahead of me who is climbing the path and says, follow me, I know the way up. What I need is somebody who models the way up. Who shows me the process? How do I deal with my fallen flesh?

How do I deal with the struggles of life? How do I deal with disappointment? How do I deal with trials? How do I deal with pride? How do I deal with temptation?

How do I deal with sin?

Somebody's got to show me that path. Because it's only in the overcoming of my sinfulness that I move toward being like Christ.

So, I have to follow somebody who's battling to overcome sin. If I'm going to climb this precipice, I want somebody who knows the way with a rope around his waist hooked to mine. Who pulls me up the right way? That's Paul. Paul put himself in that position numerous times.

And he is saying, I'm not the perfect model, that's Christ. I'm just somebody who can follow on the path. A victory.

So he says, look at verse 17. Join in following my example. Literally, the Greek says. Be fellow Imitators of me, or keep on being fellow imitators, sum mimitis. from which you get the word mimic.

Sum means together with. It's a sort of a collective call. He's saying, all of you, all of you be fellow imitators of me, mimic me, follow the way that I live my life. Back to verse 14. I am pressing on toward the goal.

You watch how I do it. You know, I believe that there isn't any better Historical example than Paul. And that is one of the reasons, surely, why the Holy Spirit filled the New Testament with that one man. He dominates everything after the Gospels. He dominates the book of Acts from chapter 13 on.

13 of the epistles came out of his pen and out of his heart and out of his mind and out of his life. He's a dominant figure. And why? Because We can pattern ourselves after him. We can see how we struggle with the flesh.

He is a model for us of virtue. He is a model for us of morality. He's a model of victory and temptation. He's a model for us of worship. He's a model for us of service.

He's a model for us of patience and endurance and suffering. He's a model of handling temper. He's a model of handling possessions. He's a model of handling relationships. In so many ways, he shows us how godliness deals with fallenness.

Something Christ could never show us. Because he was never fallen. And I believe that one of the reasons the Holy Spirit has loaded the New Testament with this man is because he is such a marvelous pattern. That's why he said to the Corinthians twice: be followers of me. That's why he wrote to the Thessalonians chapter 1, verse 6: you became imitators of us.

and of the Lord. whom we imitate.

So, as you study the New Testament and as I do, We can see through the life of Paul so much that helps us. And I confess to you, beloved. that through the life of this guy. In my ministry, the number one model has been Paul. He is the pattern of the pathway, the pursuit.

He's the climber that I try to follow after. I try to see how he handled situations. I try to hear his heartbeat. I can go back and read and read and read the same things over and over and over about Paul as reminders of how I'm to respond, how I'm to live, how I'm to act, how I'm to order my priorities, how I'm to deal with trials, suffering, and trouble. He is a constant pattern for me.

constant But it goes beyond that and I want you to note that he knows that Go back to verse 17. He says, join in following my example. And Observe, and that by the way, scape te. Is the same root word as skapas, which is translated goal in verse 14. And when it says observe, it means fix your gaze on.

It's like looking at a goal and fixing on it.

So he's saying, fix your gaze on those who walk according to the pattern you have in us. By the way, I I prefer the idea that that us there refers to Paul. It's what I call I guess you would call it a A literary plural. designed to manifest humility. It could refer to Paul.

Timothy Epaphroditus, and it wouldn't be wrong to assume that. But Paul uses that in a couple of places, and I think it's kind of a literary device that sort of wants to diffuse. Saying, follow me, follow me, I'm the perfect. He just says, Us, which sort of.

sort of diffuses a little bit of that personal Aggrandizement that someone might accuse him of. But nonetheless, what he is saying is: not only follow me, but observe others who walk according to the pattern that I manifest.

So, follow this. He probably does have in mind Timothy and Epaphroditus, but beyond them, they've already been mentioned in the epistle, they were known to the Philippians. He is saying, follow other people who follow me.

Now, listen carefully. We can all follow Paul. Because he's in print. But that has its limitations. And so what he is saying is go one beyond that and follow flesh and blood.

Timothy and Epaphroditus and the others never wrote New Testament books. We have no historical record.

So, if we can sum it up, the idea here would be this: Christ is the goal, Christ is the standard, Christ is the model, we are to be like Christ. In order to know how Christ is, we study the Word of God. We study it until the Word about Christ dwells in us deeply. Then we have a deep understanding of Christ, so we know what He's like, so we know what we're to be like. Secondly, we yield to the Spirit of God who keeps molding us into that likeness which we understand.

Now, in order to get on that path and have someone to follow, we follow Paul, who literally is revealed to us in a replete way in the New Testament.

So, we have plenty of data in order to know how he lived and how he acted. But beyond that, we need some flesh and blood, tangible, living, breathing people that we can also follow. And so Paul takes it a step further and says, Observe those who walk, that is daily conduct, who daily live their life according to the pattern you have in me or in that us idea.

Now, how does this practically come down to us? Beloved, We have the same situation today. The goal is Christ. We have a wonderful pattern for pursuing the goal in Paul. but we need some flesh and blood examples, don't we?

We don't have Timothy, we don't have Epaphroditus. They didn't write anything.

So we have nothing to follow. by way of written material. But we do have godly pastors and elders. And I believe the responsibilities of the Timothies and the Epaphroditus of that age are the responsibilities of the pastor, teachers, elders of this age. And we have that great responsibility of following after Paul toward Christ in such a way that we become the flesh and blood that others follow.

This is our responsibility. This is the responsibility of those elders and overseers and pastor teachers and teachers who lead. We are to set the pattern. This is so important.

So important. Paul, in writing to Timothy, says, be an example. Be an example. And he even delineates the categories in which that exemplary living is to take place. Be an example.

In speech, Conduct Love Faithfulness and purity. Live an exemplary life. Why? You're showing people the path. Yes, they see the perfection of Christ.

Yes, they can read about the path of Paul, but they need somebody they can touch, somebody they can watch, somebody they can feel, somebody they can talk to, somebody they can know, somebody in their world, in their time, in their place they can follow. Paul is not saying Imitate my gifts. He's not saying imitate my calling, my privileges, my achievements. No. He's saying Imitate my and others who also are imitating mine virtues, our humility, our unselfish service, our willingness to suffer, our devotion to Christ, our courage, our effort in spiritual growth.

That's what he wants us to imitate. But, beloved, it weighs heavy on my heart that I have that responsibility, as do the elders of this church and every church and every pastor and teacher. to be people that you can follow. That is a God-ordained mandate. It is important what I say.

It is important what any teacher of the Word of God says. It is essential that we teach truth. that we be true to the word of God. But it must be sustained, supported, surrounded, undergirded by a virtuous life. You're coming up that same mountain.

And you can see the goal at the top, but you need somebody whose rope you can hang on to.

Somebody you can touch and grasp.

So that you can follow the path. Personally, I believe this is one of the most serious failings in the church today. I don't know all that church history will record in the future. But I think it will record with the disastrous collapse of so many spiritual leaders, quote unquote. That the standard of expectation was lowered.

And many, many, many thousands, if not millions, of people lost their way on the path to Christ-likeness. That's the tragedy. That's the tragedy. I mean, where do you go? To find the Timothies and the Epaphroditus?

Where are the holy men? Where are the truthful men? Where are the kind and those who manifest the meekness and gentleness of Christ? Where are the powerful? Where are the humble?

Where are the unselfish models of virtue? Where are those who show us the path of victory over temptation? Where are those who walk that holy walk? Where are those who show us the path of prayer in adversity? Where are those who show us how to handle trial and difficulty?

Who can we observe? Who can we hold on to? Whose rope will help us climb? Who lives the truth? Who are the leaders that can say, imitate me?

That's the mandate. That's the mandate. Another reason that the whole Process of spiritual growth. Toward Christ's likeness is so blurred and marred today is because the leadership has fogged up the issue. The pattern is very simple.

Christ is the goal. Scripture reveals what he's like. The Spirit of God has the power to move you into His image. Paul has given you a path to follow. The church is to put flesh and blood leadership in your view that you can observe very closely in order to see how to walk.

But so much has skewed that very simple construct. The goal and the pattern is still Christ. The interpretation of the Bible has been hopelessly blurred in this particular age, which tolerates anybody's view on anything about anything. And it is very indistinct as to interpretation. In fact, if you interpret it distinctly and clearly, you'll usually lose most people.

If you don't offend them.

Furthermore, a misunderstanding and misrepresentation of the ministry of the Holy Spirit has skewed the process by which He brings about the Christ-likeness. And then you come down to the level of the Apostle Paul, and they can't even agree on the character of his teaching. Then you come down to the level of spiritual leadership, and all kinds of people are in positions of spiritual leadership who are anything but patterns to follow. And the net effect of all of this disintegration. Is the blurring Of the whole matter of Christ-likeness.

People are lost in the process. Distracted. deviated From the real goal. We have a sick and distorted church because we have lost our way. We have lost our way simply because we've lost sight of Christ.

We've lost sight of the Word and the Spirit. We've lost sight of the clear, crystal clear patterns of teaching in the Apostle Paul's revelation. And we don't have the leadership. That we so desperately need to follow. And we tolerate a lower standard of leadership than the Bible would ever allow.

The simplicity of Christian living, beloved. It's to be like Christ. That covers all the bases. That'll take care of living to the glory of God. That'll take care of all the relationships in your life because Christ.

Like Ness produces right relationships. That'll take care of the matters of Christian service. That'll take care of the matters of evangelism. How did we ever get so diffused into so much stuff? And lose sight of the simplicity of becoming like Jesus Christ.

Let's bow together in prayer. Father, It's hard for us to imagine. Why you would even Want to allow us to pursue such a goal. I pray that you would make me more like Christ. That I may know him so deeply.

That I may know as much as is possible what he is like. That I might know what I'm to be like. Help me to follow the pattern that Paul set. Who struggled so much with his weakness, with his pride, with his flesh? Who struggled so much with trials and troubles and temptations and testings, and yet, in all things, was so patient and enduring.

Who, in the midst of difficult situations, could speak a fitting word? And Minister Grace. who was so bold and courageous even as Christ. who live for one great cause. And that was Eternal Help us, Lord, to see him.

as the pathfinder, the trailblazer. down this path that pursues Christ-likeness. Thank you, Lord, also for the others in my life. Modern-day Timothy's and Epaphroditus, who showed me the way, who continue to show me the way. who have taken hold of my hand and They following Paul toward Christ have led me.

And Lord, I pray for this whole congregation that all of us would realize that the only real reason that the pastors and elders Are to play that role, take that responsibility. Is that they might teach the congregation to do that for each other. And help us to know that the chain comes all the way down to every one of us being the example that somebody else can follow. Even as Paul said to the Philippians, I'm a pattern. Timothy and Epaphroditus are a pattern.

Now you follow them so that you can be a pattern. Give us a new hunger for your word that we might know Christ better as He's revealed there. Give us a new devotion to the Spirit of God who can shape us into His image. Give us a new desire to follow our leadership. Closely.

Then we might be the leader for someone else. to move to being more like you. What a privilege. And Father, fill our hearts with that wondrous knowledge that that which is an unattainable goal in this life becomes the prize in the life to come. That when the upward call of God in Christ Jesus comes and we are called to glory, then we shall instantly receive the prize of being like the one we have pursued all our life.

What an unimaginable privilege. For which we thank you in Jesus' name. Amen. Um You're listening to Grace to You, the Bible teaching ministry of John MacArthur. Thanks for tuning in today.

John's current series is titled Reaching for the Prize.

Now in this study, John has been encouraging us to set and to pursue the right spiritual goals. And of course, there's nothing more important for spiritual growth than having a consistent diet of the Word of God. We all need that. For every Christian, no matter how long you've been walking with the Lord, feeding on Scripture daily requires discipline. To help with that, let me recommend John MacArthur's helpful tool called the MacArthur Daily Bible.

With 365 readings from the Old and New Testament, the Psalms, the Proverbs, and study notes from John, it gets you into God's Word every day and through the entire Bible in one year. Order the MacArthur Daily Bible when you contact us today. Our web address is gty.org. You can also order your MacArthur Daily Bible when you call us during regular business hours. That's 7.30 to 4 o'clock Pacific Time.

at 855 Grace. Our website again, gty.org, and our phone number, 800-55GRACE. Also, if you want to review John's current series, keep in mind you can download all four messages free of charge from our website, gty.org. The title again reaching for the prize. In fact, there are more than 3,600 sermons from John available to download for free online.

And while you're there, you can also read multiple daily devotions, you can keep up with the regularly updated Grace to You blog, and much more. All of that is available free of charge at gty.org.

Now for the entire Grace to U staff, I'm Phil Johnson. Thanks for making this broadcast part of your day. And make sure you're here next time when John MacArthur looks at the attitudes you need to avoid. if you're going to run the race of the Christian life with endurance. We're continuing John's current study called Reaching for the Prize, so don't miss the next 30 minutes of unleashing God's Truth one verse at a time on grace to you.

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