Friday, February 26, 2010

According to the apostle Paul, there were people in his world whom he considered to be, “enemies of the cross of Christ” (Phil 3:18). This is a fairly descriptive and poignant accusation. Paul said of these people that their god was their appetite and that their glory was in their shame Vs. 19). They had set their hearts and minds on the things of this world, so the cross was a great distraction and inconvenience to them. It challenged their very being and this led them to treat Jesus and the cross so disrespectfully that Paul said they were “enemies of the cross.”

Followers of Jesus embrace the cross and see it as the most incredible expression of love one can image. It is in the cross we see Jesus and it is in Jesus we see the cross. When God chose to enter into His creation it was not with pomp and circumstance; it was with the humility and brokenness of the cross.

This old rugged cross makes followers of Jesus citizens of another world. The enemies of the cross have fixed their eyes on this world, and are sucking it dry for their own greed and shame. The friends of Jesus have fixed their eyes on their true homeland, heaven. They have their eyes fixed not on shameful appetites but upon “a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ” (Phil. 3:20).

Jesus is with His disciples everyday in this world, and He is getting them ready for the next world. Somebody once said, “All this and heaven, too?” It’s true. Jesus delivers us from the silliness and destructiveness of shameful appetites, with the understanding that He will at the right moment, “transform the body of our humble state into conformity with the body of His glory” (Phil. 3:21).

In the mean time the word is, “Stand firm in the Lord, my beloved” (Phil. 4:1).

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