Deeper Commentary
CHAPTER 3
3:1 Finally my brothers, rejoice in the Lord. For me to repeat the same
things to you as I did before is not tedious, indeed it only confirms
their certainty- "Finally" sounds as if the letter is being concluded,
but Paul is only half way through the letter as we now have it. He seems
to get carried away now [in the Spirit] in warning against false teachers
and Judaism. Paul says he is repeating what he has said before, and the
fact he is doing so prompted by the Spirit inspiring him "only confirms"
the reality of the problem. He may have written these things before in an
unrecorded letter, or perhaps he is reminding them of the warnings he gave
them whilst present with them. He feels he has to make these warnings
against legalism because he wants them to "rejoice in the Lord", and
legalism takes away the joy of salvation by grace on account of the Lord's
work.
3:2 As so I say again: Beware of the dogs, beware of the evil workers-
"Dogs" were unclean animals; to call religious Jewish people workers
of evil, when they considered themselves full of good works, and unclean
body cutters [an allusion to pagan idolatry] was extreme language. Indeed
"dogs" could refer to the male prostitutes of the idol temples. This was
how Paul saw the Judaists- their legalism was a form of the crudest
idolatry.
Beware of the mutilators!-
“Look out for those dogs… who do evil… who cut the body” (NET). If this is
merely a reference to circumcision only, it would contradict Paul’s
tolerant attitude towards those who in their immaturity still practiced
the rite. He wasn’t so passionately against circumcision as such; his
reference is to those who divide the body of Christ through insisting upon
such things. This cutting of the body is so easily done, whenever discord
is sown. The language used by the Spirit here is some of the strongest
anywhere in the New Testament. Sowing division is so seriously
wrong.
3:3 For we are the circumcision who worship by the Spirit of God and
glory in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh-
Circumcision was understood by Paul to refer to what is done to the heart
of a person after they have been baptized: "But he is a Jew who is one
inwardly, and circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit not in the
letter" (Rom. 2:29). The inward man is where the Spirit operates (Eph.
3:16), strengthening us with God's psychological power. And here in Phil.
3:3, Paul again associates spiritual circumcision with the work of the
Spirit; for it is the Spirit which empowers us to cut off the flesh. It is
this work of the Spirit which is the seal or token of the fact we are in
covenant with God and are His true Israel. Human willpower cannot cut off
the flesh; those who seek justification by steel willed obedience are
placing "confidence in the flesh" rather than in God's operation through
the Spirit. It is by the Spirit that we glory or (as AV) rejoice in
Christ. This connects with the opening thought in 3:1, that we are to
rejoice in the Lord Jesus rather than go the way of Judaism. There can be
no joy for those who try to cut off the flesh by the flesh. And they have
no sense of rejoicing or glorying in the Messiah Jesus if they effectively
do not need Him to cut off their flesh. Circumcision is something done to
another person when that person is immature and powerless. This is exactly
what God does to the new born convert to Christ, through sending forth the
Spirit of His Son into their heart to cut off the flesh (Gal. 4:6).
3:4 Though I myself might have confidence even in the flesh. If any
other man thinks to have confidence in the flesh, I yet more- Paul is
not boasting here, but rather saying that even the best qualifications of
Judaism were irrelevant to salvation. Phil. 3:4-11 reads rather like an
encomium [see on Gal. 1:10], with Paul writing of how he was "circumcised
on the eighth day... of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew born of Hebrews"
(Phil. 3:5). But then he as it were alters course half way through, as if
to say 'Nah, just kiddin''. He speaks of his "confidence in the flesh",
his former "gains", as being now "loss for Christ"; he's almost sarcastic
about his humanly impressive encomium. For he says all this in the context
of the preceding chapter, Phil. 2, where he has shown that the only true
path of glory lays after the pattern of the Lord Jesus, who had to die the
death of the cross in order to be highly exalted. A similar sarcasm about
his humanly impressive encomium is to be found at more length in 2 Cor.
11:21-12:10.
3:5 Circumcised the eighth day, of Israelite stock, of the tribe of
Benjamin, a Hebrew of Hebrews. As touching the law, a Pharisee-
Benjamin was in the middle of Israel, the tribe of their first king, and
the only son of Jacob born in the promised land, indeed he was Jacob's
favourite son; and the only tribe faithful to Judah. The battle cry of
Israel was “After thee, O Benjamin”. Paul was a pure blooded Jew with no
question of intermarriage in his recent ancestors, a Hebrew of Hebrews in
that his Hebrew parents had not become Hellenised; and belonging to the
strictest school of interpretation of the Law (Acts 26:5).
3:6- see on Phil. 1:10; 1 Tim. 1:16.
As touching zeal, persecuting the church. As touching the righteousness
which is in the law, found blameless- Judaism at the time apparently considered persecuting Christians as a
sign of high qualification as a Jews. In saying that he persecuted the
Christian church "zealously" he was alluding to the way that Phinehas is
described as 'zealous' for the way in which he murdered an apostate Jew
together with a Gentile who was leading him to sin (Num. 25). Note that
the Jews in Palestine had no power to give anyone the death sentence, as
witnessed not only by the record of the trial of Jesus but Josephus too (Antiquities
20.202; BJ 2.117; 6.302). Paul was a criminal murderer; and he had
justified it by saying that he was the 1st Century Phinehas. Ps. 106:30
had commented upon the murder performed by Phinehas, that his zeal "was
accounted to him for righteousness". This sets the background for the
converted Paul's huge emphasis upon the fact that faith in Jesus is
what is "reckoned for righteousness", and it is in this way that
God "justifies the unGodly" (Rom. 4:3-5; 5:6; Gal. 3:6). Paul is inviting
us to see ourselves as him- passionately obsessed with going about our
justification the wrong way, and having to come to the huge
realization that righteousness is imputed to us by our faith in the
work of Jesus. Paul saw himself as learning the lesson of Job. Phil. 3 has
several allusions back to him- like Job, Paul suffered “the loss of all
things” (:8), although he considered himself previously “blameless” (:6).
He threw away his own righteousness, that he might be justified by grace
and know thereby the essence of Christ (:9), just as Job did.
Paul's technical obedience to the Law was "found blameless"; but it was
only "found" that way by men, externally; for in Rom. 7:15-25 he admits to
gross and continued disobedience to the Law in his spirit. If we seek
justification before God by legal obedience to the Law, we shall be "found
sinners" (Gal. 2:17). We can only be found truly blameless before God if
He imputes righteousness to us through our being in Christ, and we are
"found in Him" (:9).
3:7 However, what things were gain to me, these have I counted loss for
Christ- Paul saw himself as the man who gives all to buy the pearl
(Mt. 13:45,46 = Phil. 3:7,8; although this passage also alludes to Moses;
as if he took inspiration from Moses to be like the man in the parable).
He saw the excellency of the knowledge of Christ as the pearl whose beauty
inspired even a rich man to give up all that he had. "Gain" could imply
financial gain; but Paul has recently used the word in saying that "to die
is gain" (1:21). This is the radical inversion of values which there is in
Christ; secular gain becomes spiritual loss, and secular loss becomes
spiritual gain. Paul alludes to this idea when he says that the shipwreck
on the way to Italy was gaining from a loss (Acts 27:21 uses the same
words). It could well be that he had reflected on that incident, the
casting overboard of secular wealth with his own hands, and it now
influenced his later thought now imprisoned in Rome.
3:8- see on Lk. 9:23-25.
Yes indeed, I also count all things loss for the excellence of the
knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of
all things, and count them as rubbish, that I may gain Christ- Paul truly believed, "doubtless" (AV), without
even temporal doubt, that the loss of secular things was gain. We tend to
doubt that sometimes; waves of worry about our financial future and longer
term security swamp us at times. But Paul was without doubt about his
position. The "all things" which Paul lost were largely psychological
values and standing amongst men; although the words for gain and loss can
have a distinct financial sense too. And he likely lost much of his
family, seeing he was from a line of proud Pharisees. The power of Paul's
teaching about singleness is backed up by his personal situation. As a
member of the Council who condemned Stephen, he would have had to be
married. An unmarried Orthodox Jew would have been a contradiction in
terms at that time. And yet he is evidently single in his Christian
ministry. It seems fairly certain that his wife either died or left him at
the time of his conversion, probably taking the children with her. If this
is so, it gives extra poignancy to his comment that he had suffered the
loss of all things for the sake of his conversion. The chances are that he
thought and wrote that with a difficult glance back to that Jerusalem
girl, the toddlers he'd never seen again, the life and infinite
possibilities of what might have been... And it gives another angle on his
description of his converts as his children.
Paul "counted" the things of this life as loss "for the excellency of the
knowledge of Christ" and His sufferings, so that he would gain the
resurrection. Moses likewise rejected the world for the same two reasons:
the excellency of sharing the reproach of Christ, and secondly from
respect unto the recompense of the reward, at the resurrection. He uses
the same word translated "esteemed" when we read of how Moses "esteemed"
the reproach of Christ as greater riches than the treasures in Egypt (Heb.
11:26). The "reproach" of Christ is the same word used concerning Christ
being "reviled" on the cross. Paul felt that the intellectual heights of
knowing the mind of our crucified Lord, of being able to enter into the
riches than are even now in the mind of Christ (Col. 2:3) more than
compensated for his sacrifice of all material things in this life. And
Moses was the same; he esteemed the "reproach of Christ", the knowledge
that he was sharing the sufferings of his future saviour and would thereby
enter the Kingdom which he would make possible, as far greater than the
possibility of being King of Egypt. He knew that he was sharing the
sufferings of Christ, and that therefore he would be rewarded. It was this
knowledge which motivated him in rejecting the riches of Egypt.
Paul could have been such a high flyer; he profited (materially, the Greek
could imply) in the Jews' religion above any one else (Gal. 1:14). But he
resigned it all. He wrote some majestic words which ought to become the
goal of every one of us: "But what things were gain to me, those I counted
loss for Christ. Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the
excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I have
suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I way
win Christ" (Phil. 3:7,8). Why did he do it? Not just because he wanted to
get salvation. "For the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my
Lord". For the excellency of who Christ is, as my Lord,
he did it. Grasping the wonder of our salvation in the Lord Jesus should
do even more than motivate us to write out a cheque; Paul not only gave,
but he counted the things of this life as dung (and that's just
what it means); he despised material advantage. This is a stage
beyond just being generous.
3:9 And be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own which is
of the law, but which is through faith in Christ- the righteousness which
is from God by faith- As noted on :6, it matters not if we are "found"
blameless before men; it is our standing in Christ which matters.
Righteousness "of the law" is not God's righteousness, but 'our own'. A
feeling good about ourselves because we were technically obedient to some
laws. Righteousness which comes from God has to be imputed, or given- on
account of our faith in Christ. This is absolutely what Paul taught the
Romans and he is repeating it here.
3:10- see on Acts 9:16.
That I may know him, and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship
of his sufferings, becoming conformed to his death- The full knowledge of the Lord Jesus will be when
we know materially the "power of His resurrection". Eternity will be about
relationship with Him, and that is why eternity begins now insofar as we
have relationship with Him. Knowing Him, therefore, refers to relationship
rather than technical knowledge of theological propositions concerning
Him.
The centrality of the cross is reflected in the way in which to live a
life crucified with Jesus is set up as the ultimate aim of the Christian
life. We are “becoming conformed [coming towards His morphe, His
form and appearance] unto his death" (Phil. 3:10 RV). Slowly, our lives
are working out towards that end; this is intended by God to be the final
position we all reach by the time of our death or the Lord’s return; that
we will in some vague, feint way, have become conformed to the mind of
Jesus as He was at His death. For as chapter 2 has explained, His
morphe there is to be our pattern. His Spirit is to be ours. And
through His resurrection, we are given that Spirit to displace our natural
spirit (Jn. 7:39). The process of transformation by the gift of the new
spirit, of "becoming conformed", is ongoing now and continues until our
last breath. Old age is thereby given meaning once we grasp this. And then
finally at the Lord's return, our body will be “conformed" (same Greek
word) to His in a physical sense (Phil. 3:21). And this is why we should
count all things loss in order to come to know Christ (Phil. 3:8)- which
the context suggests we are to read as knowing the spirit of His death.
This is why His cross, the mind He had at His death, is so vital and
central to our lives.
3:11 If by any means I may attain to the resurrection from the dead-
As noted on :10, the idea is that it is through this ongoing conforming to
His morphe our mind / spirit, we shall become fully like Him at the
resurrection from the dead. This is the "means" by which we shall share
His resurrection in literal terms. Paul clearly speaks of "the
resurrection" as meaning 'the resurrection to eternal life'. Some will
indeed be raised, condemned, and shall die "the second death". But Paul is
focused on our resurrection being that of the Lord, and so he speaks of
"the resurrection" as meaning 'the resurrection to life'. Paul uses the
same word for "attain" in writing that through the work of the Spirit we
shall come to 'attain' the full knowledge of the Lord Jesus and become
like Him, a "perfect man", fully sharing His spiritual stature (Eph.
4:13). This shall finally happen at the transformation of resurrection;
for "we shall be changed", not just physically, but into Him in the
fullness of all that means. Note that Paul here uses the same ideas of
attaining to a 'perfect' state (:12) and knowing the Lord Jesus (:10).
3:12- see on Acts 18:18; 2 Tim. 4:6-8.
Not that I have already attained, or am already perfected; but I press on,
that I may lay hold of that for which Christ Jesus has also laid hold of
me- As explained on :11,
the final attainment of perfection will be at the resurrection. Relatively
late in his career Paul could comment: “Not that I have already obtained,
or am already made perfect”, alluding to the Lord’s bidding to be perfect
as our Father is (Mt. 5:48). Through this allusion to the Gospels, Paul is
showing his own admission of failure to live up to the standard set. Yet
we must compare this with “Let us therefore, as many as be perfect…”
(Phil. 3:12,15). In 1 Cor. 13:10, he considers he is ‘perfect’, and has
put away the things of childhood. Thus he saw his spiritual maturity only
on account of his being in Christ; for he himself was not “already
perfect”, he admitted. We are counted as if we are in Christ, as if we are
Him; but we are to live like that in practice. In a marvellous statement
of our mutuality with the Lord, we are to lay hold on what we have been
laid hold of for; and what is in view is the final perfection of body and
spirit which shall be achieved at the resurrection to life. We have been
seized (Gk.), laid hold of, for salvation. The grip is tight, and only by
our wilfully wriggling out of it will the Lord not achieve His intention
with us.
3:13 Brothers, I do not consider that I have made it my own yet. But
one thing I do, forgetting the past and looking forward to those things
which are ahead- Paul twice stresses that he does not consider himself
to have arrived at the "perfected" state (:12). Perhaps this was in
response to slander that he considered himself perfect. "Forgetting the
past" doesn't mean to delete past events from our memory banks- because
that is not within our power to do. And Paul talks freely about his awful
past, h had not obliterated memories. So Paul presumably means that we are
not to wallow in past failure. The certainty of what is ahead means we
will focus on that; the glass is not only half full rather than half
empty, but more than half full. We admit we have not yet attained
perfection, but this doesn't mean we are to allow the past to exist as a
fountain of constant regret. We are to look forward in sure hope to the
things ahead- which is to know Christ, to be perfectly and fully like Him
through the resurrection to life (:10,11,14). Paul sees this hope as being
"ahead". He looks forward to it without any doubt as to whether it shall
be true for him; because 'hope' means a confident assurance that what we
hope for we shall certainly receive. It is not a mere 'hoping for the
best'. But "looking forward" is literally 'reaching forth', and connects
with the image of the runner which will be used in :14. The idea is of the
athlete stretching forth head and body towards the finishing line. Paul
felt that the end of his race was very near- another indication that he
wrote this at the very end of his life, when he felt he had all but
finished his race (2 Tim. 4:7). See on 2:16. Here he speaks as if he is
but centimetres away from the tape and is reaching forward to touch it.
3:14- see on 2 Tim. 4:6-8.
I press on toward the goal, to the prize of the high calling of God in
Christ Jesus- The Greek for "goal"
is literally 'the line'; Adam Clarke's commentary gives examples of its
usage like this in contemporary literature. As noted on :13, Paul is
reaching forth towards the finishing line, just centimetres away. The
"prize" is to be as the Lord Jesus (:10,11,14). This is the essence of our
future salvation and eternity; the Abrahamic land promises are incidental
to this. Eternity will be about knowing Him, and the location of that
relationship is not much emphasized in the New Testament. It is a high or
heavenly calling in that to be called to be like Him is the highest
calling, the greatest end point of the journey, which could be imagined.
3:15 Let us therefore, as many as are mature, be thus decided; and if
in anything you are otherwise decided, this also shall God reveal to you-
"Mature" or "perfect" (s.w.) is the state which Paul says we have not yet
attained (:12). But we are counted as perfect by being in Christ.
"Decided" is literally "minded" (AV). Paul repeatedly brings everything
back to the state of our hearts, how we think, and whether we are letting
the Spirit operate within us or not. Those who have received the Spirit
will be thinking of the things of the Spirit (Rom. 8:5 s.w.). The "mind"
we should have is that of the Lord Jesus, and that is a gift, of His
Spirit (Rom. 15:5). The same word has been used in 2:2,5 of how we should
have the mind or spirit of Christ in His time of dying on the cross. In
the immediate context, the "mind" we should have is one of pressing toward
the goal or finishing line of final and total identity with the Lord
Jesus. But a mindset is an outlook which incorporates many aspects of
thinking, attitude and behaviour. In some things we will be out of step
with the total mind of Christ; the work of the Spirit is to transform us
towards His image in every way. And so in those things or aspects wherein
we are 'otherwise minded', the Spirit will reveal these areas to us. We
think of how the Lord used the same word in commenting that the Father,
rather than the unaided mental strength of the flesh, had "revealed" the
Lord to Peter (Mt. 16:17). The Father both hides and reveals things to
people (Lk. 10:21); and He does all things by the Spirit. The arm of the
Lord has to be revealed to men (Jn. 12:38). 1 Cor. 2:10 is clear as to the
connection between the Spirit and God's 'revealing' things to believers:
"God has revealed them unto us by His Spirit" (also Eph. 3:5). God
revealed His Son within Paul (Gal. 1:16). Stage by stage, aspect by
aspect, those areas of our thinking and being which are not of the spirit
of Christ will be revealed to us, so that we might move towards that total
transformation into Christ which shall be at the last day.
3:16 For now, according to that understanding unto which we have
attained, by that same rule let us walk- As noted on :15, we are on a
journey towards the full mind of Christ within us. But we are not yet
perfect (:12), aspects of the Lord's mind are still being revealed to us
(:15); but we are to live according to what we do currently understand.
This conception of each believer being on a journey is important in
enabling us to live together in the church, being at different stages on
the journey. We cannot expect another to have grasped what has been
revealed to us; we have to be patient, recognizing that full completeness
of understanding and Christ-mindedness will only come at His return.
It has been observed of Paul here: “In Phil. 3 he concludes a fundamental
statement of his own Christian conviction by commending his opinion: ‘So
let those of us who are mature think in this way. And if in any way you
think differently, this too will God reveal to you. Only we must stand by
that conclusion which we have already reached’ (3:15,16). That is: I am
sure that mine is a correct, mature, Christian view, and I believe that in
God’s time, you will in the end share it. But what matters is that you
honestly maintain and live by the position you have at present reached”.
"Rule" translates kanon, a line or boundary. And yet we will each
have different lines or boundaries. It is this question of drawing lines
and establishing boundaries which tends to divide believers, especially
once they are written down as 'canon', as documents such as statements of
faith and definitions of behaviour. All this is an attempt to impose the
understanding or maturity of one upon another. We are to each individually
walk according to the kanon which we have come to understand,
realizing that we will likely have other aspects revealed to us as the
Spirit transforms us towards full understanding or knowing of the Lord
Jesus (:15). We simply cannot impose our kanon upon another. The
fact the wider church has spoken of 'canon law' is the tragic opposite of
what Paul is teaching here.
3:17 Brothers, join in following my example, and note those who so
walk, as you have us for a pattern- The example in view may
specifically refer to the attitude expressed in the notes on :16. They
were to be 'co-followers', bound together by a common attempt to walk as
Paul did. The 'walking' in view is surely that just spoken of in :16, of
walking according to our present state of understanding of the Lord Jesus.
Paul's tolerance of others, of meeting them where they stand and going
further with them, is to be our pattern. And yet it is also clear from 1
Tim. 1:16 that Paul saw himself as "a Christ appointed model" (Robert
Roberts).
3:18 For many walk, of whom I told you often and now tell you even
weeping, that they are the enemies of the cross of Christ- The
'walking' is that of :16, walking according to our current understanding
of the mind of Christ, and open to being taught further of Him (see on
:15). Those who did not walk like that, in the context of this chapter,
were the legalistic Judaizers. Legalism requires that all jump the same
bar; the idea of each individual being on a personalized journey, being
progressively led by the Spirit ever closer towards the full mind of
Christ, is all anathema to legalism. Such Judaizing requires that each
have an identical understanding and position at the same moment. Growth is
thereby disallowed. And Paul wept tears on the parchment, as it were,
because he saw that such attitudes were robbing the cross of Christ of its
power in men.
The cross of Christ is personified here as if to show that the Lord's
whole being and life was crystallized in His cross. He could take the
bread and wine with the comment that right then His body was being
broken and His blood shed (note the present tenses).
We can be active enemies of the Lord's cross unless we carry it, no
matter how soporific and unaggressive our lifestyles may be.
3:19 Whose end is destruction, whose god is the belly and whose glory
is in their shame, who mind earthly things- The Judaizers in view (see
on :18) were not actually bringing people closer to God by their
insistence upon a common obedience to the same set of legislation. They
were glorying in shameful things, and worshipped their own sensual desires
as a god. Again, Paul brings it all down to the state of mind, whether we
have the Lord's Spirit or not. And they were minding or thinking of
earthly things; for the heavenly calling is to think with the
mind / Spirit of the Lord who is now in Heaven (see on :14). We noted on
:2 what extreme language Paul uses of the Judaizers. By teaching obedience
to a few rules, they were allowing shameful behaviour to be glorified, and
sensual desires in other areas to become a god to people. This is why we
have noted time and again in expounding Paul's letters that Judaism was so
attractive to newly converted Gentile Christians, who didn't want to leave
behind the sensuality and shameful behaviour they had once enjoyed. Their
"end", telos, is in contrast to the end or perfection / maturity (teleios)
of the Spirit filled believer, which is to be immortalized with the mind
of Christ at His return. But the end of legalism and these Judaizers at
the Lord's return would be destruction; the same word is used of how Jews
justified in their own minds by the Law are destined to "destruction"
(Rom. 9:22). The 'enemies' of the Philippians of 1:28 had advance notice
of their "destruction" (s.w.); and these opponents were therefore the
Judaizers who are here referred to. The Jewish Christians who were drawing
back from Christ, rather than reaching forward unto Him (3:13,14), were
drawing back unto destruction (Heb. 10:39 s.w.). Peter uses the same word
about the end of the Judaizers in 2 Pet. 2:1,2,3.
3:20- see on Mt. 6:10.
For our citizenship is in heaven, from which we also eagerly wait for the
Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ-
When Paul speaks of redemption, he alludes to the practice of manumission,
whereby a slave could be redeemed by his master and given the breathtaking
gift of the much coveted Roman citizenship. Thus there were slaves who
actually became Roman citizens. Hence here he invites all of us to see
ourselves as a citizen of a Heavenly state (Phil. 3:20). We learn from
Acts 22:26 that Paul was a Roman citizen from birth. The question
therefore arises as to how they obtained citizenship. It would not have
been through army service, because they were observant Jews (Phil. 3:5)
and Jews didn’t serve in the army. “The most common origin of this status
for Jews outside Palestine was the manumission of Jewish slaves by masters
who were themselves Roman citizens. In this case the citizenship was
acquired… after one or two generations” [Simon Legasse, ‘Paul’s
pre-Christian career’ in Richard Bauckham, ed., The Book Of Acts
Vol. 4 (Carlisle: Paternoster, 1995) p. 372.]. So it seems Paul's father
may have been ‘redeemed’ by manumission. And yet he uses the very language
of manumission about all who are redeemed and freed in Christ. Roman
citizenship was the most coveted thing in the Roman empire. Phil. 3:20
claims that we all have the coveted citizenship of the Kingdom /
empire of Heaven. The Judaizers were minding earthly things (:19); but our
minds should be full of Heavenly things. We are pressing towards the goal
of being made fully like the Lord Jesus (:10,14), and this pressing
towards that is spoken of here as eagerly awaiting the second coming. Rom.
8:23 uses the same word for "eagerly wait" in describing how we who have
the spirit / mind of Christ therefore and thereby eagerly await the
redemption / manumission of our bodies. And Paul is to speak of this in
:21. It is by or on account of the Spirit that we "eagerly await" the
Lord's coming (Gal. 5:5). The Spirit is progressively at work in us,
transforming us into His mind- and so due to that work, the work of our
lives and hearts, we eagerly await the moment when we shall be fully
changed into His image. This is why all who eagerly look for His coming on
this spiritual basis shall be saved (Heb. 9:28; 2 Tim. 4:8). We note the
connection of thought with 2 Tim. 4:8, written by Paul apparently at the
end of his life in Rome: "From this time forward there is laid up for me
the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall
give to me at that day; and not to me alone, but also to all those that
have loved his appearing". This would be further reason for thinking that
Philippians and 2 Timothy were written at around the same time, at the end
of Paul's life and imprisonment in Rome. See on 2:16.
3:21 Who will transform our lowly body- The link between our
mortality and humility is brought out in Paul’s description of our present
state as being “the body of our humiliation” (Phil. 3:21 RV). Believing we
are mortal ought to be a humbling thing. The fact we lose faculties
and memory, needing to be cared for by others, is humbling. But it is
built into our human experience purposefully, because God's whole game
plan with us is to progressively humble us, to bring us down, so that He
might exalt us in due time (2:2,5). We must go with the program and not
resist it, humbling ourselves under His humbling hand that we might be
exalted in due time (1 Pet. 5:6).
That it may be conformed to his glorious body, according to the working by
which he is able even to subdue all things to himself- There is a clear parallel in Rom. 8:11: "But if
the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He
that raised up Christ Jesus from the dead shall give life also to your
mortal bodies- through His Spirit that dwells in you". The gift of the
Spirit given at baptism is the means whereby God is "working" within us.
That gift is the guarantee of our eternal salvation (2 Cor. 1:22; 5:5).
The transforming work of the Spirit is leading us through processes which
will come to their final term in our body being transformed into the form
of His glorified body, at His return. Bit by bit, every part of our lives
is being subdued to Him through the internal work of the Spirit. This is
the huge significance of our death; that is the point at which we will
have been humiliated and subdued unto Him. As noted on 2:2-5, we are
called to have the morphe of the mind of the Lord Jesus, especially
His morphe in His time of dying. This will be revealed in more
physical terms at the second coming by our bodies being "conformed" to His
body. This is the end intention of the entire working of the Spirit in
transforming our minds now.