homesearchcontact

Home Button
About Us Button
Articles Button
Discussion Forum Button
Donations Button Meetings Button
Purchases Button
Downloads Button
Join the Team Button
Mailing List Button
Search Button
Links Button

If you don't know where to start press here - or use the "Search"or "Contact" links.

Reachout Trust
24 Ormond Road
Richmond Surrey
TW10 6TH
England

Phone & Fax:
0845 241 2158

E-mail

A company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales, number 4162936.
A registered charity number 1087085

Reachout Trust Logo
  It Doesn't Work - I've tried it! (Philippians 3:4-7)
There is a point when zeal for God tips over into legalism. When well-intentioned people mistake religion for faith, rules for devotion form for substance. You see it in groups like the Albeginsians, or Cathars. Calling themselves Bons Chretiens (Good Christians) this medieval French heretical sect divided adherents into two classes; the 'perfect' (parfait), who were baptised by the Holy Spirit by the laying on of hands and adhered to a more strict lifestyle, and 'believers' (credentes), who led normal lives but vowed to receive the baptism when death was threatened.

Further back in history there were the Essenes a Jewish sect that existed from about 165 BC to 68 AD. They were an ascetic group that lived in isolation from the rest of Israel and keeping the law more rigorously even than the Pharisees. They, too, were divided into two broad classes. There were those who lived a totally monastic lifestyle, keeping themselves isolated, and other adherents who mixed to some degree with the world and formed a lower class of believer.

Then there were the Pharisees, the group to whom Paul had belonged. These, too, were religious purists, totally committed to preserving and promoting the keeping of the law in every particular. These were model Jews, widely respected, but relatively few in number (no more than around 6,000). 'Pharisee' means 'Separated Ones' and their conduct toward others certainly set them apart. But then some people like the idea that they are - special.

Paul here is more or less saying, "Been there, done that, bought the T-shirt."

"If anyone else thinks he has reason to put confidence in the flesh, I have more."


Paul had put his confidence in three things:

His race: Paul was a Jew (v.5), of the tribe of Benjamin, who had been circumcised when he was eight days old according to God's instruction to Abraham.

His religion: Paul was a Pharisee (v.5), who were considered the 'spiritual athletes' of the Jewish faith. He had studied under the great Jewish teacher Gamaliel (Acts 22:3). He so valued his religion that he persecuted the church in order to keep its purity (v.6).

His righteousness
: Paul's verdict on himself was, "As for legalistic righteousness, faultless" (v.6). Paul is not here claiming to be perfect but insisting that no one kept the Pharisee's legalistic code better than he did. If there had been a 'Pharisee of the Year' award Paul would have won it - most years.

Paul was telling the believers in Philippi that he had tried it all and found it woefully inadequate. He had trusted in the flesh, in his own efforts, and discovered that, "No one will be declared righteous in his sight by observing the law; rather, through the law we become conscious of sin" (Ro.3:20).

For some this news comes as a terrible shock. The Essenes lived at just the right time but missed Jesus. The Pharisees saw and heard Jesus but it did most of them no good since they continued to trust in their own efforts. The Albeginsians are in many ways representative of groups down the ages that have moved from faith to religion, trust to dogma, substance to form.

Who will you put your trust in this week? How will you live in light of that trust? Paul called himself "a Hebrew of Hebrews" (v.5). Are you "a Christian of Christians" because of your knowledge, practice, or religion? Or can you say with Paul:

"But whatsoever was to my profit I now consider loss for the sake of Christ" (v.7)

Back to Readings Menu

                © Reachout Trust. Please read Terms and Conditions for use