IT WILL HAVE BEEN WORTH IT!
April 9, 2000 PM
Sermon Outline
Phil 2:16b-18
INTRO: We struggle; we toil; we sweat; we strain ... and we want to believe that the end result will have made the effort seem worth it. In any discipline or enterprise one wants to see some profit, some reward at the end of the day ... or at the end of that particular enterprise. Do you hear any hint of that idea in these words of the apostle Paul? (Read Phil 2:16b-18). It seems to me this is exactly the point, and I think that right here we can capture some of the feelings of any dedicated preacher or teacher. If I can just see some change in lives; if I can just believe some of these folks will remain faithful, it will have been worth it. In his expressing this feeling Paul uses two pictures.
I. THE FIRST CENTERS ON THE WORD LABORED
A. Two possible ideas are in this word
1. the word actually speaks of strenuous toil
2. so, in one idea there is the person who works from dawn til after dark ... is bone weary in his labors
3. in the other is idea of an athletes discipline and training of months for just a few minutes in the contest
4. Paul thinks of himself and his labors for them
B. He wants to rejoice in the day of Christ
1. but he is not here concerned about his eternal reward
2. his desire is bound up with church in Philippi
3. and that rejoicing will be in the salvation of these friends! to see them on the Lords side in the judgment will be his joy (1 Thes 2:19)
4. he wants to know theyll have worked out their own salvation
C. Now, think of his running or laboring in vain
1. he has toiled long in their behalf for them to then be lost would be like a laborers not being paid at the end of a toilsome day
2. or it would be like an athletes not winning the race after having trained so strenuously
3. he is honestly concerned his work will be for naught
4. he has truly a preachers feelings what if Lydia is not there? what if the jailer friend is not there?
5. but if theyre all there, it will have been worth it!
II. THE SECOND INVOLVES THE PICTURE OF SACRIFICES
A. He refers to the sacrifices of the Old Testament
1. there were the burnt offerings and drink offerings
2. in Num 15:3-10 the two types of offerings are associated together ... where one was, there was the other
B. Now, service and faith of Philippians was burnt offering
1. indeed, Rom 12:1 explains this idea more fully
2. in Christ our lives lived with and in daily service are the offerings God desires and for which He asks ... Heb 13:15,16
3. perhaps this idea is hinted even in passages such as 1 Sam 15:25a or Ps 51:15-17
C. But where is the drink offering to accompany?
1. if I be poured out ... his own blood?!!
2. here is the whole picture, then, as it looked to Paul ... they were the burnt offering in their living service, and he was the drink offering by his martyrdom
D. But what if any of Philippians should become unfaithful?
1. then, his martyrdom would seem a waste, senseless shame
2. on the other hand, if they do remain faithful, evangelistic, caring , then his toil and death would have been worth it 2 Cor 12:15
CLOSE: Are the strains, the stresses, the sacrifices worth it to preach and teach? Very honestly, my humanity at times causes me to wonder! Yet, to see one life changed, influenced seems to make all of that worth the price. With no thought of comparing myself to a Paul, still, I fervently hope that my labor among you will not have been in vain.
Cecil A. Hutson
09 April 2000