Cultivate Genuine Gospel Relationships

Philippians 1:3-11

I thank my God every time I remember you. 4 In all my prayers for all of you, I always pray with
joy 5 because of your partnership in the gospel from the first day until now, 6 being confident of this, that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.

It is right for me to feel this way about all of you, since I have you in my heart and, whether I am in chains or defending and confirming the gospel, all of you share in God’s grace with me. God can testify how I long for all of you with the affection of Christ Jesus.

And this is my prayer: that your love may abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight, 10 so that you may be able to discern what is best and may be pure and blameless for the day of Christ, 11 filled with the fruit of righteousness that comes through Jesus Christ—to the glory and praise of God.

Cultivate Genuine Gospel Relationships

There was a TED Talk a couple years ago on the subject of friendship. It was largely based on research done by a renowned “evolutionary psychologist” by the name of Robin Dunbar who theorized that on average a normal person has the capacity to maintain 150 relationships, ranging from casual friends to close confidants.  

At first 150 seemed like a lot to me, but when you realize that they are not all people you tell your deepest darkest secrets to – that some are like that barista whose name I still don’t know but greet like a friend anyway – then it began to feel a bit more manageable. Humans are relational creatures. We can form bonds with other people quickly and over the smallest things.

But while we may have the capacity to maintain 150+ casual relationships, how many relationships do you have that you could talk about the way Paul did about his relationship with the people of Philippi?

I thank my God every time I remember you. In all my prayers for all of you, I always pray with joy.[1]

Is there even a single person in your life that you feel that way about? If you’re married, chances are that you love your spouse more than anyone else in the world; but the chances are also pretty good that there are times when you’d rather not see their face. If you have kids, chances are that they opened up corners of your heart and expanded your capacity to love beyond what you thought possible; but the chances are also good that they have introduced you to levels of frustration and anger and insomnia-induced delirium that you never knew before. Friends are great, but they can disappoint. Grandparents spoil you, but they can also be grumpy. Is there a single person in your life that without fail – in every memory – you always, only, ever feel joyful about?

These are strong words from Paul about people that he spent only a few months with. And it’s not as if his time with them was always sunshine and rainbows. Paul’s time in Philippi was not a honeymoon period. He ended up in prison for doing a good deed. The citizens turned against him. The city leaders ordered Paul and Silas both to be stripped and severely beaten. Philippi may have been Paul’s first foray into Europe with the gospel, but it was far from a honeymoon-type experience.

And yet, he can still speak so positively about the Philippian Christians – not because he had selective amnesia and chose to forget about the pain, not because the Christians were perfectly pure in an otherwise despicable metropolis. Paul was able to speak so positively about those Christians because of their partnership in the gospel from the first day until now,[2] and because no matter what their past experience or present circumstances were, they were all sharers together with Paul in God’s grace.[3]

Let’s think about that second part first. Paul wasn’t able to be so positive because they were all so perfect. He was able to be so positive because they all shared the same grace from God. The jailer participated in Paul’s brutal beating, but when Paul preached the gospel to him – the good news about God’s salvation through Jesus – that jailer was cut to the heart. He regretted his actions; he repented of his sins; he asked for forgiveness and found it, not only from Paul but from Jesus.

And before we start to think about how magnanimous Paul is for forgiving this man who brutalized him, let’s remember what Paul’s background was. He described himself as the worst of sinners. He was a murderer and a persecutor of Christians. He had done far worse to others than what that jailer had done to him. But God forgave Paul too.

That’s why God sent his Son into this world – to shower sinners like us with an affection that we never deserved. You think it’s impressive for Paul to talk so glowingly about the Philippians – how about how God looks at you? There’s no way that God should look at you and always be joyful about everything you think, say and do. You may not have persecuted Christians like Paul did or imprisoned innocent people like the jailer did to Paul, but have you mistreated others – even or especially your fellow believers? Have you spoken a harsh word? Have you held a grudge? Have you broken someone’s trust or hurt someone who’s just trying to help you? Have you ignored someone who needed you or allowed a difference of opinion or even just a difference in personality to divide you?

There’s no way that God should look at you and be happy, but he does, because when he looks at you he sees Jesus. He sees the Son he sent in love to show you love. He sees the Jesus who embodied love, even to enemies, who prayed for their forgiveness while they nailed him to the cross. When God looks at you, he sees the Son who sacrificed his life as the payment and penalty for you sin so that you and I – and every other believer who calls on his name – could be sharers together of his grace.

And that creates a special bond. We are all – you and I – sharers together of God’s grace in Jesus. We are all forgiven. All our sins were paid for. God doesn’t hold a single one against a single one of us. So, even if though someone in this room may have done you harm – or you to them – we can still sit side by side as brothers and sisters in a family defined by God’s grace and forgiveness – first, receiving that forgiveness from him to us, but then also, by his grace, freely giving that forgiving love to each other too.

That’s how Paul can always pray with joy when he even thinks about those imperfect Christians in Philippi – not because he has selective amnesia, but because he sees them as sharers of God’s grace in Jesus. They deserved God’s love as little as he did, but, just like him, they received it as God’s gift anyway.

That’s what defines our relationships too. And that’s what makes this a special group of people. Have you ever thought about this – that you would probably would have never met at least half the people in this room, if it hadn’t been for the simple fact that you share God’s grace in Jesus? I know I wouldn’t be here. I wouldn’t have a job. I wouldn’t live across the street. I wouldn’t be in this city or country. But God’s grace transcends so many boundaries and barriers and binds us together into a family of believers.

The Christian Church – and especially our congregation – is not just a group of people who share a common interest. We’re not Swifties. We don’t just root for the same team. We don’t have the same hobbies or senses of humour, but what we do have is what we heard before – a “partnership in the gospel.”[4]

The Apostle Paul wasn’t the be-all-and-end-all of the church in Philippi. When he left, the people there took ownership of the gospel. They continued to meet together, even without their founding – or a formally trained – pastor. They continued to study God’s Word and encourage each other. They continued to share Jesus with the other people in their city. They weren’t passive observers or silent spectators, and neither are you. You are partners in the gospel too.

As sharers of God’s grace, you are uniquely qualified to share God’s grace with others – to tell them what his forgiveness means for you. As sharers of God’s grace, your unique experiences equip you to encourage others who are going through the same or similar things that you did. As sharers of God’s grace, your background and insight allow you to learn and grow together as you share your story and hear others’ during your study of God’s Word.

But none of that would be possible if we didn’t have a relationship with each other. Can you be a Christian and not go to church or be a member of a congregation? Technically, yes, but the ceiling for your personal growth and the service you can offer your God is much lower than if you were a member of God’s family with other believers.

If you don’t come to worship, you can hear my sermon online, but you can’t raise your voice in praise or profess your faith with people of diverse backgrounds who nevertheless share your faith. If you don’t come to Bible class – either on Sunday mornings or during the week – you can’t hear Amber’s amazing contributions or share your own experience and see how it benefits someone else. If you don’t partner with your pastor and your fellow members in reaching out with the gospel, then our collective pool of resources and people to reach out to gets exponentially smaller.

But together, we can give glory and praise to God in a chorus of various voices. Together we can grow more and more in knowledge and depth of insight. Together we can defend and confirm the gospel and bring it to the people in our lives by pooling our resources and partnering together.

This is what Jesus prayed about on the night before he died. This is what we find demonstrated among those early Christians – a devotion to God and to each other, a desire to cultivate genuine relationships together as sharers of God’s grace and partners in his gospel.

It is right for us to feel this way – to thank God for each other; to pray for each other with joy; to long for each other with the affection of Christ Jesus; to grow in knowledge and love; and to share the confidence of the Apostle Paul, i.e. that this unique bond and special relationship that we enjoy – the fact that you can walk into a room full of strangers and feel at home – that special relationship doesn’t come from us – from any shared interest or experience – but from Jesus and the sacrifice that he made in love to make us brothers and sisters in his blood.

I may be able to maintain about 150 casual relationships, but these are the ones I want to cultivate because you are my family in Christ. Amen.  


[1] Philippians 1:3,4

[2] Philippians 1:5

[3] Philippians 1:7

[4] Philippians 1:5

Easter Changes Everything

Matthew 28:1-10

After the Sabbath, at dawn on the first day of the week, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went to look at the tomb.

There was a violent earthquake, for an angel of the Lord came down from heaven and, going to the tomb, rolled back the stone and sat on it. His appearance was like lightning, and his clothes were white as snow. The guards were so afraid of him that they shook and became like dead men.

The angel said to the women, “Do not be afraid, for I know that you are looking for Jesus, who was crucified. He is not here; he has risen, just as he said. Come and see the place where he lay. Then go quickly and tell his disciples: ‘He has risen from the dead and is going ahead of you into Galilee. There you will see him.’ Now I have told you.”

So the women hurried away from the tomb, afraid yet filled with joy, and ran to tell his disciples. Suddenly Jesus met them. “Greetings,” he said. They came to him, clasped his feet and worshiped him. 10 Then Jesus said to them, “Do not be afraid. Go and tell my brothers to go to Galilee; there they will see me.”

Easter Changes Everything

There’s a show on Disney+ right now called What If…? It is produced by Marvel Studios and explores alternative endings to the Marvel movies you know and love. What if instead of Captain America, we had Captain Carter fighting for the Brits? What if the Avengers lost? How would the story go on? How much different would the ending be if you changed one seemingly small detail or moment at the start?

If you like Marvel movies, you might find that series interesting. Maybe you’ve already watched it. If you’re not into comic book characters, have no fear! This will be my last mention of them. I’m here to talk about Jesus. But I do wonder what a Christian version of that TV series would look like. What if Adam and Eve never ate the forbidden fruit? What if Pharaoh never let the Israelites go? What if David missed when he slung that first stone at Goliath?

Or, more fitting for today: What if Jesus never rose from the dead?

Can you imagine a world without Easter? I can’t! And it’s not because there would be no Easter baskets or Easter egg hunts. It’s not because we’d have to come up with another reason to eat ham or lamb on the first Sunday after the first full moon after the vernal equinox. We wouldn’t be here if there were no Easter. The Christian Church wouldn’t exist. What would a world without Easter look like?

Well, we got a glimpse of it for about 36 hours after Jesus’ crucifixion, and it didn’t look good.

The disciples who had all promised that they would rather die than desert Jesus did exactly what they said they would never do. They ran away and hid because they were afraid that the Jews would do the same thing to them that they did to Jesus.

The men and women who had spent the last 3 years of their lives following Jesus wherever he went and listening to whatever he said suddenly forgot everything he had said to them. He had told them on at least three separate occasions, with at least one of them coming in the last week, that he was going to die in Jerusalem and rise again on the third day. But nobody remembered.

The women who went to the tomb were lost. They had no idea where to go from here. So they prepared spices to go and anoint a body that wasn’t there. They had misplaced their purpose in life.

In a world without Easter, Jesus’ disciples were disappointments to God and to themselves. They were afraid. They had forgotten everything that was meant to give them hope and peace. They were aimless and without purpose. In a world without Easter, Jesus’ disciples were a mess.

But let’s be real for a second. How much different is our world even with Easter? And I don’t mean for all the non-Christians or the nominal Christians.  I mean for you. How different are you than those post-crucifixion, pre-resurrection disciples?  

Some of us have been privileged to have spent enough time as Christians that we have been confirmed in our faith. Whether as children or adults, we stood before a congregation like this and made an oath to our God that went something like this: The pastor would say:

Do you intend to continue steadfast in this teaching and to endure all things, even death, rather than fall away from it?

And then we would respond:

I do and I ask God to help me.

Now, whether you have been confirmed or not – whether you have sworn an oath like this or not – has anything short of death kept you from being faithful to God’s Word? Or is a sports practice or a late Saturday night or the opportunity to spend time with your family all that it would take to keep you from spending time with God and his Word in church on a Sunday? The disciples made and broke similar promises, but at least they were legitimately afraid for their lives. Can you say the same?

The disciples followed Jesus and listened to him for 3 years, but in the moment of hardship it was as if they hadn’t heard a thing. Believe it or not, you have something even more valuable than 3 years of personal devotions with Jesus. You have the whole thing in writing. You have the promises of God written down to give you hope. You have the will of God in black and white to give direction and guidance for your life.

Does it take a death threat to make you forget what God says? Or is the reason that you don’t start your day with devotion simply that you opened a notification on your phone and lost the next hour of your life? When the doctor gives you that diagnosis you’ve been dreading, even if you can remember God’s promises to you, do you put your trust in them? Or do you find yourself spiraling and flailing for answers from WebMD and your friend down the street who went through the same thing, instead of seeking solace in Scripture and your Saviour?

Do you remember your purpose in life? Or do you find yourself lost, or so preoccupied with the next thing that’s right in front – the next day or week or year of your life – that you have forgotten your place in eternal life?

We don’t have to look at the 36 hours between Good Friday and Easter Sunday to know what a world without Easter would look like. We live it all too often in our day to day life. But that’s why I appreciate the fact that we get to celebrate this holiday every year. Because at Easter, we get to see the tender hand of our God as he deals with sinners like us.

When the women got to the tomb, they had all the wrong expectations. They didn’t expect to find Jesus alive, just as he said. They fully expected to find him dead. And yet, when they got there, the angel that God had sent to them did not wag a finger and say, “O you of little faith! Stop doubting and believe!” He said:

“Do not be afraid, for I know that you are looking for Jesus, who was crucified. He is not here; he has risen, just as he said. Come and see the place where he lay. Then go quickly and tell his disciples.”[1]

What a gentle God we have, who works with us in our sinful weakness. He made it clear that these women should have remembered Jesus’ promises and that they shouldn’t have been ruled by fear or let anything else in life or death stand in the way of their faith in God, but he didn’t preach about it. He restored their hope and revived their faith by pointing them to Jesus, who had been crucified, but now was alive.

He had been crucified. But not for nothing. It was for me, and it was for you. Jesus died to forgive our sins, even for the times when we fail in our commitment to him or when we forget or doubt his promises to us. Jesus died to forgive us, and then he rose from the dead to give us comfort and peace and joy.  

Look at the way the Marys left the tomb. They hurried away “afraid yet filled with joy.”[2] There were still all those same reasons to hole away behind locked doors. There were still all those same reasons to forget or to doubt Jesus’ promises. The Jews were still angry and powerful. They would still face opposition and persecution and difficulty. But having seen the proof of Jesus’ resurrection gave them a joy that surpassed their fear.

That’s what Jesus does for you. That’s why I’m so glad that Jesus did rise from the dead and that we don’t have to imagine a world without Easter, because the resurrection of Jesus gives you a joy that is so much greater than your fear or worry or frustration. And I think that’s really important for you to hear. The resurrection of Jesus does not take all your fear or worry or frustration or distraction away. The resurrection of Jesus infuses you with a joy that is greater than all of them put together.

If it is guilt you feel – if you’re ashamed at how little it takes to keep you away from God and his Word – listen to what Jesus said when he met the women: “Do not be afraid. Go and tell my brothers to go to Galilee.”[3] Not, “Go and tell those traitors… those deserters… those promise-breakers…” He says, “Go and tell my brothers…”[4]

That’s how Jesus feels about you too. Even though you fail him – even when you are unfaithful to him – he still considers you family. He doesn’t identify you by your sin or your weakness. He sees you through the lens of his love – the same love that compelled him to die for you to forgive you and rise again to give you the hope of heaven. If you feel guilt, see God’s grace at his graveside that calls you his family.

If it is fear you feel – if you’re worried about the world around you or what the devil and his demons might do to you – look at the Roman soldiers. They were hired specifically because they were supposed to be fearless and formidable but they fainted and were lying on the ground like the dead man they were supposed to be guarding. They posed absolutely no threat to the women. Jesus’ resurrection proved that he was far more powerful.

Now, there may still be reasons for you to have fear in this life – and God may not make all of them shrink like these soldiers did – but God still has far more power than any of the things that cause you fear, and he can and does protect you for your eternal good. If you feel fear, see God’s power here.

If you feel distracted or aimless – if you are lost in an endless to-do list that doesn’t let you look past tomorrow – listen to what both the angel and Jesus said to these women,

“Come and see…[5] Go and tell.”[6]

That is the daily lifecycle of a Christian. Come and see what God has done for you. Occupy your heart and your mind with the message God has given you in his Word – and while your reasons for forgetfulness and doubt will not go away, you will be filled with ever-increasing faith that produces in you a joy to go and tell your spouse, your children, your neighbour the good news of Jesus crucified but raised to new life for you.

A world without Easter would be a world full of guilt and fear and distraction. But Easter changes everything. Now we live in a world full of forgiveness and power and purpose because of Jesus. Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia! Amen.


[1] Matthew 28:5-7

[2] Matthew 28:8

[3] Matthew 28:10

[4] Ibid

[5] Matthew 28:6

[6] Matthew 28:10