It's entirely countercultural these days, let each esteem another better than himself. That's the heart of a servant, the kind of heart we're all to have as believers. Paul wrote those words from a Roman jail cell. His message, true greatness, means becoming a servant of all. Today, another chapter in the basics of the Christian life. From Chicago, welcome to The Moody Church Hour with Pastor Philip Miller. Stay with us for a time of worship and teaching as we continue a series on Back to the Basics.
From the second chapter of Philippians, we'll find out all about the basics of service. Here now is worship leader Tim Stafford. Let's pray as we begin. Lord, it's you we're here to see.
You're the one we're most excited to meet today. We pray that as you speak to us, we would be listening, and that as your spirit works, we would find ourselves changed by it. This is a miracle that you do. We pray to you that you would teach us what humility means through the example of Christ.
How could we be proud if Christ humbled himself so much? We pray in Jesus' name. Amen. Let's rejoice in the gospel today.
All creation holds together by the power of your voice. Let the skies be cleansed by the glory. Let the land and seas rejoice. Hurry up for all creation. You're the Lord of every land, and your cry of heart rings out across the land. And you let the gates of angels beam to sea, and save the lost, and exchange the joy of heaven for the anguish of the close. With a prayer you let them free, with a word you forfeit, yet how silently you suffer that the guilty play go free.
Hurry up for all creation. You're the Lord of every land, and your cry of heart rings out across the land. With a shout, you rose victorious, resisting victory from the grave, and ascending into heaven, leading captives in your pain. Now you stand before the Father, interceding for you all.
Of each life and tongue and nation, you are leading sinners all. You're the author of creation. You're the Lord of every land, and your cry of heart rings out across the land.
You're the author of creation. You're the Lord of every land, and your cry of heart rings out across the land. This is God's word to you. So if there is any encouragement in Christ, any comfort from love, any participation in the Spirit, any affection and sympathy, complete my joy by being of the same mind, having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind. Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility, count others more significant than yourselves.
Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others. Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped. But he emptied himself by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men and being found in human form. He humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Therefore, God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus, every knee should bow in heaven and on earth and under the earth. And every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God, the father. We will glorify the King of Kings. We will glorify the Lord of Lords, who is the great I am. Lord Jehovah reigns in majesty. We will bow in the name of Jesus Christ, who is the great I am. Lord Jehovah reigns in majesty. We will bow in the name of Jesus Christ, who is the great I am. Hallelujah to the Lord of Lords, who is the great I am.
Hallelujah to the King of Kings, Hallelujah to the Lamb, Hallelujah to the Lord of Lords, who is the great I am. He who was before there was none, walked across the pages of time. He who made every living behold Him. He who heard humanity's cry, left His throne to wake as a child.
He became like the least of us. Behold Him, Jesus, Son of God, Messiah, the Lamb, the Royal I Am. Oh, be still and behold Him. He who died with sinners and saints, healed the blind, the lost, and the lame. Even now He is in our hands. Behold Him.
He who chose a criminal man, paid with blood to settle a debt, buried death as He rose to life. Behold Him, Jesus, Son of God, Messiah, the Lamb, the Royal I Am. Oh, be still and behold Him.
Jesus, Alpha and Omega, our God, our risen Savior. Oh, be still and behold Him. Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty. Worthy, worthy, worthy to receive all praise. Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty. Worthy, worthy, worthy to receive all praise. Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty.
Worthy, worthy, worthy to receive all praise. Jesus, Son of God, Messiah, the Lamb, the Royal I Am. Oh, be still and behold Him. Jesus, Alpha and Omega, our God, our risen Savior.
Oh, be still and behold Him. The other day I had lunch with a brand new acquaintance and he asked me one of those questions that could have come straight out of one of those icebreaker books. You know the ones I'm talking about, like 101 great conversation openers, you know, that sort of thing. He asked me this question. He said, who is the greatest person you've had the privilege of knowing? And I thought, well, that's a dumb question.
Not really. But I did think, I thought this is actually a good question. At first, I started to think about celebrities.
Almost instinctively, that's what came to my mind. Famous people, people with big egos and big press and big money. And then I realized I had two problems. One, I don't really know any famous people. And secondly, that's glamour, not greatness. The question was, who's the greatest person you've had the privilege of knowing? And he didn't ask what is the most glamorous person.
And I realized there's a difference. Glamour impresses from a distance. Greatness makes impact up close. Glamour is all about the outside. Greatness is on the inside.
Glamour draws attention to itself. Greatness focuses attention on others, doesn't it? So after a while and pause in thinking, I finally answered, I think my grandpa Miller. He passed away earlier this year and went to be with Jesus. But he was the very best encourager I have ever met. He believed in his kids and his grandkids.
He was good and kind and faithful and selfless and loving and generous. And friends, that's true greatness, isn't it? Isn't that amazing? All the marketers tell us life is about glamour, don't they? Amazing careers, big houses, fun cars, fashionable recreation, looking young forever, right?
Instagram worthy vacations, early retirement, thick hair and white teeth. Yeah? But all of a sudden at a funeral, we see through all that, don't we? We remember what's true.
We don't talk about glamour. We talk about greatness at a funeral. We talk about friendship and tenderness and selflessness and sacrifice and generosity and care and faithfulness and love.
And all of those things spring from a common well. And that's humility. Humble people are great people. Humble people put other people first.
Humble people admit when they're wrong. Humble people ask for forgiveness. Humble people show genuine interest in others. They show empathy and genuine love. They encourage and invest in other people. They give of themselves freely.
They're generous and selfless and sacrificial and servant-hearted. That's what humility is. That's what greatness looks like.
And here's what's amazing to me. This very greatness that we admire in other people is the very same greatness that God intends to work in your life and mine. By the power of His Holy Spirit, as He conforms us to the image of Christ, He is calling us to share in His eternal glory and to our greatest joy forever. Friends, God intends to make you and me into people of true greatness. Servant-hearted people, humble like Jesus Himself. And that kind of true greatness is what we're going to talk about today.
Grab your Bibles. We're going to be in Philippians 2, verses 1 to 18. We're going to see four insights this morning about true greatness. We're going to see the priority of true greatness, the model of true greatness, the secret of true greatness, and the beauty of true greatness. The priority, model, secret, and beauty of true greatness.
All right? Let's jump in. But first, let's pray and seek the Lord's face together. Father, we want to be great, not as the world defines it, but as you define it. We want to be great like Jesus. Help us to learn what this looks like and what it requires of us.
Be our teacher. Empower us to change and become new today. We pray this in Jesus' name. Amen.
Amen. So first, the priority of true greatness. The priority of true greatness. Chapter 2, verse 1, here in the book of Philippians. So if there's any encouragement in Christ, any comfort from love, any participation in the Spirit, any affection and sympathy, complete my joy by being of the same mind, having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind.
Just pause there for a moment. There are four ifs here, four conditions. Let's see if they apply to us, okay? First, if there's any encouragement in Christ. So as Christ has reached down to you, friends, in His saving love, as He has enfolded you into His forever family, have you experienced encouragement? If you have, say yes.
Okay. If there's any comfort from His love, have you, friends, have you felt the comfort of the love of God? Say yes. If there's any participation in the Spirit, has the Spirit, friends, has He drawn you in faith to Christ as He is in you and with you and empowering you for participation in His spiritual family? Have you participated in the Spirit, friends?
Say yes. If there's any affection or sympathy, have you experienced the affection and sympathy of Christ in your life? Do you know His affection, His love for you? Do you feel His sympathy and compassion for you in your weakness?
If you have, say yes. Okay. So this is for us. Paul says, then complete my joy. How would we do that, Paul? Three things. By being of the same mind. I want you to think as one. I want you to be one, united together, moving in the same direction, having the same mind, having the same love.
Number two, that you would love one another with the love that Christ has loved you first. And three, being in full accord and of one mind. So there's a rational. Be of the same mind. There's a heart.
Have the same love. And there's an embodied action. Be of full accord and of one mind. Moving together in one purpose, bound together in one unity and Spirit. Together, united as one, mutually working together. This is what John 17, 21 records Jesus praying for us, the church. He says, I pray that they all may be one, just as you, Father, are in me and I am in you, that they may be in us. So what Paul is saying here is, if you are united with Christ, if that's true of you, then I want you to live in unity with those who are in Christ. It is not just enough to, to be united with Christ. That unity will flow down through us into the body, into the family of God, bringing unity among us as brothers and sisters.
Now, how would we do that? Verse three, do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility, count others more significant than yourselves. Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others. He says, I don't want you doing anything from selfish ambition or conceit, no private agendas, no showing off, no ego, but in contrast, in humility, count others more significant than yourselves. Put them first, prioritize others, put their needs ahead of your own. That each of you look not just to your own interests, but also the interests of others. Don't just look out for yourself to make sure your needs are getting met. Look out for others, make sure they get what they need. See, Paul's unpacking what he meant when he said back in chapter one, verse 27, when he says, only let your manner of life be worthy of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Remember that? He's telling, he's showing us what that looks like. You want a life that is worthy of the gospel. It looks like, like this, live in unity with one another, be humble and selfless and don't just think about your stuff, but think about those around you. Because friends, God desires a united family filled with humble love. God desires a united family filled with humble love. Friends, can you imagine how wonderful it would be? Church, if we would live like this every day of our lives.
I don't know about you, but I long for this kind of mutual, loving, selfless, humble, others focused community. It would be a little taste of heaven, wouldn't it? Because it's a glimpse of the heart of heaven, a glimpse of Jesus himself, isn't it?
Because he's the model of true greatness. That's where Paul goes next, the model of true greatness. Verse five, have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus. So he says, have one mind. What is the one mind? The mind of Christ. Verse six, who though he was in the form of God did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself by taking the form of a servant being born in the likeness of men and being found in human form. He humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Here friends is the ultimate example of what Paul is calling us to.
He says, here's your model. It's Christ himself. I want you to follow him, imitate him. Because friends, the way of Jesus is not just a set of beliefs that we adhere to.
It is a lifestyle that we follow. Paul says, I want you to imitate Christ. Even though he was in the form of God, sharing in all of his glory and power and majesty and rights and privileges from all eternity past, he didn't count equality with God something to be held onto, grasped tightly, but no, he relinquished his rights, his privileges. He took on the form of a servant.
He was born in the likeness of humanity. He became one of us, mortal, frail, human, forever. And being found in human form, he humbled himself even further by becoming obedient to the point of death. And not just any death, but death on a cross.
The most shameful death known at the time. And Paul says, look at Jesus. By rights he didn't have to do any of this, but he set his rights aside in humility and selfless service to rescue us and lay down his life in our place and for our sake to bear all of our sin and shame and to make us right with God. It's the only reason we're here is because he didn't hold onto what was rightfully his.
He laid it down to serve you and me. Listen friends, Jesus did nothing out of selfish ambition or conceit. In humility, he considered us more significant than himself.
And he looked to the interests of others. You see this, he gave himself away for you and me. Therefore, verse nine, on the basis of this humble service, selfless, radical, self-giving love, therefore God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name. So that at the name of Jesus, every knee should bow in heaven and on earth and under the earth. And every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God, the father. Amen.
And isn't this remarkable? Friends, Jesus gave up his glory. He gave up his name. He gave up his honor.
He gave up his rights. He humbled himself to serve and offer himself as a sacrifice for us. And the father, listen, the father gave it all back and then some. He highly exalted him, bestowed the name above every name, cosmic confession of his Lordship, redounding to the glory of the father. And how did Jesus come into all of this glory?
How did he do it? Through servant-hearted humility and others first sacrificial love. Friends, Jesus' path to glory ran through the cross. And Paul says, look to Jesus. Follow Jesus. Imitate Jesus.
It's not just Paul who says this. Jesus calls each of us through the cross to glory. Jesus calls each of us through the cross to glory. Remember John chapter 12 verses 24 to 26. Jesus says, truly, truly I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone.
But if it dies, it bears much fruit. Whoever loves his life will lose it. And whoever hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life. If anyone serves me, he must follow me. And where I am, there will my servant also be. If anyone serves me, the father will honor him.
He says, you want to be honored by my father? You want to secure your life forever? You want to be truly great in the kingdom of God? Then take up your cross and follow me. Lay your life down and you will find it. Give yourself away and you will find your true self.
In humility, become the servant of all and you will be great in the kingdom of heaven. Die to your selfishness. Die to your pride. Die to your insistence on having your own way. Die to having your own rights upheld. Die to having your preferences met. Friends, there is so much in me that needs to die for the beautiful life of Christ to come to life in me. There's so much that needs to die because I've got a problem.
You know what it is? I'm selfish. I instinctively think of myself first. By default, I look to my own needs. By nature, my focus is on me. And you're thinking, maybe you're sitting here and you're thinking, boy, I'm so glad my friend or my spouse is here to hear this message. They really need to hear this. Well, it's you too. You know that, right?
If you don't believe me, I'll prove it to you. Let's say you're in a group photo at work or something like that and they snap the picture and it's a whole bunch of you and the photographer brings the phone over and says, hey, check this. Is it a good picture? Who do you look at first? You look at yourself, don't you?
And what makes it a good picture? If you look good, was I sucking in? Was I looking all right?
Was my chin up right? This is, we automatically look to ourselves first. And friends, there's so much that needs to die in us for the life of Christ to be resurrected into our existence. Jesus calls us to follow him through the cross to glory, to lay down our lives for others, just as he laid down his life for us.
That's where true greatness is born. Now, how do we do that? How can we selfishly oriented beings learn to die to ourselves?
If it was easy, we would have already done it. What's the secret? How do we become people of humility and selfless love like Christ? Well, the secret of true greatness comes next.
The secret of true greatness. Look at verse 12, therefore my beloved, as you have always obeyed, so now not only as in my presence, but much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with fear and trembling. For it is God who works in you both to will and to work for his good pleasure. There's a paradox here.
Do you see it? Attention in these verses. He says, first, you work out your salvation with fear and trembling. In other words, nobody's going to do this for you. You have to take responsibility for the working out of your own salvation with fear and trembling. It's not going to happen by accident. You're not going to wake up some morning and go, ha, I'm holy all of a sudden.
That's not going to happen. You got to take some ownership. But look at the second part. For it is God who works in you both to will and to work for his good pleasure. See, the only reason you're able to work out your own salvation is because God is working in you in the first place, you see.
Without him, there's no willing and there's no working. It is God who works in you both to will, desire, resolve, appetite, longing to be better and holy, and it is he who empowers the work of your doing. You work out your salvation, but he works in you the work you work out. Is this starting to make any sense? This salvation that God has planted in you, friends, by grace, through faith in Christ is coming alive in you, and it will bear fruit through you.
And he says, I want you to work it out. You're responsible for bearing the fruit of Christ in your life. It's going to take work. It's going to take effort, striving. Do it with fear and trembling.
Why? Because God is on the inside, dwelling in you by his Holy Spirit, working in you that which is pleasing in his sight. So every desire for humility, every longing for a self-sacrificing life, every moment you want to be more others focused in your love is a moment from the Spirit of God himself. It is coming in you. The desires are being birthed in you, and it is his power that is now working through you in every doing, in every faltering attempt at obedience, it is from him.
We work out what he is working in. Do you see the paradox, the tension? It is both your doing and God's doing at once. This is why Paul says in Galatians 2 20, I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me and the life I now live in the flesh, I live by faith in the son of God who loved me and gave himself for me. You say, wait a minute, Paul, which one is it? I've been crucified and I no longer live or the life I still live. Which one is it, Paul?
Yes. Yes, I have died and yet I live. It is my life and yet it is Christ. You see, it is at once he is working in us what we then work out. Colossians 1 29, again, Paul, he says, for this I toil, struggling with all his energy, which he powerfully works within me.
For this I toil, that's an effort word, right? Struggling, straining with all his energy. There is output here, Paul says, which he is powerfully working with in me. It's his energy.
It's his life. It is coursing through me as I yield to him. Or as Jesus says in John 15 verse 5, I am the vine.
You are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit for a part from me, you can do nothing. So friends, the key to transformation lies in obedient surrender. The key to transformation lies in obedient surrender. We obey, that's our part, but not in self-effort, in active dependency and surrender to the Holy Spirit who is working in us and through us. And we surrender, but not passively. We surrender to the leading and desires of the spirit. We yield to his direction and we put it in gear. And in the words of Galatians 5 25, we keep in step with the spirit. We don't lag behind.
We don't run ahead. Hand in hand, step by step, we move when he moves and not a moment before and not a moment after. We put our feet in front of each other, but the spirit leads.
Keep in step with the spirit. And he says, slowly but surely, you will walk into the true greatness of the life of Christ himself, which will become your own. Is that not a beautiful thought?
Now let's look at the beauty of true greatness, the beauty of true greatness. Verse 14, do all things without grumbling or disputing that you may be blameless and innocent children of God without blemish in the midst of a crooked and twisted generation among whom you shine as lights in the world, holding fast to the word of life so that in the day of Christ, I may be proud that I did not run in vain or labor in vain. Even if I am being poured out as a drink offering upon the sacrificial offering of your faith, I am glad and rejoice with all of you.
Likewise, you should be glad and rejoice with me. He says, if we are to become truly great like Jesus, full of servant hearted humility and others first sacrificial love, we're not going to be grumbling or complaining or griping, not going to be disputing or arguing or fighting. What would it look like instead? Blamelessness, innocence, unblemished children of God. That's who you are. You would bear the family resemblance of our father and Jesus Christ, his son, our brother, and the Holy Spirit whose life is now our own. And we would shine, shine as lights, as stars in the universe in this crooked and twisted generation, a light of hope to a lost and dying world, holding fast, not to our own rights, but holding fast to the word of life to the very end. Paul says, I want to see you faithful, enduring, holy in every way, righteous, but for the throne of God in glory. That's what my whole life is about, Paul says. I'm laboring and running this race.
This is why I'm in the game. I want to see your faithfulness to the very end. And that would be my great joy, even if this is my last act and my life is being poured out and this is my final few days on earth. If that's true, I rejoice because this was worth every moment to see you become glorious like Jesus Christ. And that's my joy.
And I want you to mingle your joy with mine. And all of this comes down to whether you will say yes to the way of Jesus, whether you will step, you and I, whether we will step into this call to true greatness, to become like Christ. Will we give up our rights and privileges? Will we humble ourselves? Will we become a servant? Will we sacrifice? Will we give of ourselves? Will we put others first? Only then, friends, will we have unity and humble love in the family of God. Only then will we be revealed as the blameless children of God that we are. Only then will we shine like stars, like lights in a crooked and twisted generation. Only then will we hold fast to the very end, to the glory that Christ is calling us to. Friends, becoming truly great like Jesus means going against the flow. Becoming truly great like Jesus means going against the flow. Friends, we're not going to learn sacrificial self-giving, others-focused love from this twisted and crooked generation.
Right? We're not going to learn that from ourselves. We're not going to learn how to in love lay down our rights and privileges from our cable news stations. We're not going to learn how to become sacrificial servants of all from our political leaders. We're not going to learn how to look out for the interests of others from our social media channels.
No, if we're going to become truly great like Jesus, it's going to mean going against the flow. I was talking this week with a bunch of Chicagoland pastors all throughout Chicago here, and much of our conversation centered around how disheartening it has been over the past year, watching the world infect our churches. It is so angry out there. It is so bitter, so divisive, so toxic over every imaginable issue. Vaccinations, no vaccinations, race, politics, you name it.
It is so toxic out there. We were lamenting how instead of shining like light in a crooked and twisted generation, our churches have been so often infected by the prevailing culture around us. Instead of shining with sacrificial self-giving, humble, others-focused love, we have so often been grumbling and disputing like everyone else. And friends, may I plead with you for the sake of Christ, if there is any encouragement in Christ, if there is any comfort from His love, if there's any participation in the Spirit, any affection and sympathy, complete my joy by being of the same mind, having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind. Do nothing out of selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility, count others more significant than yourselves. Let each of you look not only to your own interests, but the interests of others. Do all things without grumbling or disputing that you may be blameless and innocent children of God without blemish in the midst of this crooked and twisted generation, among whom you shine as lights in the world, holding fast to the word of life so that on the day of Christ, I may be proud that I did not run, run in vain or labor in vain.
D.L. Moody once said, I know of nothing that speaks louder for Christ and Christianity than to see a man or woman giving up what they call their rights for others and in honor preferring one another. So here's the takeaway. True greatness means becoming a servant of all. True greatness means becoming a servant of all. Remember what Jesus said, whoever would be great among you must be your servant and whoever would be first among you must be slave of all. For even the son of man came not to be served, but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many. Now here's the fact of the matter. Most of us will not give our lives away in one fell swoop, will we?
We're not going to do it. It's not a once and done deal. It is the accumulation of a thousand small acts of selfless love and sacrificial service. That's how we give our lives away. It happens when we take out the garbage or clean up the mess or share the last bite or hold our tongues. When we allow ourselves to be inconvenienced for others. When we give more than our fair share. When we choose to break the silence. When we say I'm sorry first. When we extend forgiveness to someone who's not really sorry enough yet. When we choose to bless our enemies. When we choose to lend a hand as the spirit prompts and leads and empowers we step out and obey. I want to leave you with one question. It's a servant's question. The question is how can I help? How can I help? Anybody can use this question. When you're tired and exhausted and thinking about yourself find someone and ask how can I help? And whatever they say just do it in the strength and joy of the spirit as he calls you to become more like Christ.
It's not glamorous but it's the stuff of true greatness and in the end it's what really matters. Would you pray with me? Father we love you. Father forgive us for our selfishness. Forgive us for our pride. Forgive us for our ego. Forgive us for living our own way and following our own desires instead of following the spirit.
Instead of following Christ. Father teach us to give ourselves a way to become people of great beauty and glory and greatness in the kingdom of our father. That we might become like Christ who gave up everything for us. Teach us to live lives worthy of the gospel of Jesus Christ we pray by the power of your spirit for the glory of your name. Amen. Amen. For our benediction today I just want to remind us of the words of Jesus from the book of Mark chapter 10.
We read these earlier. Jesus said to his disciples you know that those who are considered rulers of the gentiles lord it over them and their great ones exercise authority over them but it shall not be so among you. Whoever would be great among you must be your servant and whoever would be first among you must be slave of all for even the son of man came not to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many. You are loved Moody Church more than you know. Have a great Sunday. On today's Moody Church Hour we heard pastor Philip Miller teaching on the basics of service the third sermon in a series on back to the basics. Next week don't miss some great teaching about the basics of community taken from chapter two of Paul's writings to the Philippians. Make plans to join us. The Moody Church Hour is a listener supported ministry.
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