SPEAKER_01
0:20 All right, folks, welcome back to the Daily Blade. 0:22 We are going to march through the book of Philippians. 0:25 I have no idea how long this will take. 0:27 We're only going to do little tiny bits at a time, at least to begin with. 0:31 We'll pick it up in Philippians chapter 1, verse 1. 0:34 The Bible says, Paul and Timothy, servants of Christ Jesus. 0:38 So let's stop right there, give you a little bit of a background on the book of Philippians. 0:42 It's written by the Apostle Paul, and Paul is in prison. 0:46 He is writing to the church at Philippi. 0:48 He loves them dearly. 0:49 It's going to be almost a love letter of gratitude to them. 0:53 But one of the things that you need to know is that Paul is facing death here. 0:58 That he knows this is probably the last letter he is ever going to write. 1:02 And yet, Philippians is known as the book of joy. 1:05 So keep that in mind throughout the whole book. 1:08 And as you know, or maybe you don't know, a little background on the Apostle Paul. 1:12 Before he was the Apostle Paul, he was known as Saul of Tarsus. 1:16 He was a terrorist who wanted to wipe out this movement called the way of the Jesus followers. 1:23 He is on the road to Damascus, and Jesus, post-resurrected, post-ascended Jesus, shows up on the scene and a bright light kicks Saul off of his horse. 1:33 And in that very moment he is converted and he becomes the greatest church planner, the greatest missionary of all time. 1:39 So it says Paul and Timothy. 1:40 Timothy shows up towards the middle of the book of Acts. 1:45 Timothy's got a lot going against him. 1:47 Timothy is young. 1:48 This is why in 1 Timothy, Paul is going to say, Let no one look down upon you because of your youth, but set for them an example in life, love, speech, and purity. 1:57 In the book of Timothy, or anywhere in the Bible, Timothy's dad is never mentioned. 2:02 He was raised by his mom and he's raised by his grandma. 2:05 And apparently, Timothy struggles with fear because one of the things that Paul is going to tell Timothy over and over and over is this Timothy, you can't be so afraid, man. 2:15 He says in 1 Timothy, he says, For God has not given you a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind. 2:22 And so these are not very good resumes of people that would be heroes of the faith, and yet God knows exactly what he was doing when he chose these two men, a former religious terrorist and a weak, young, timid guy. 2:36 And yet God puts his spirit in these two men and uses them to do incredible things. 2:41 Says Paul and Timothy, servants of Christ Jesus. 2:45 The word here for servant is the Greek word doulos. 2:48 It means bond servant. 2:50 So don't think like slave, like transatlantic chattel slavery kind of slave. 2:55 In fact, let me just point this out. 2:56 The Bible is not pro-slavery. 2:59 In our history, in our nation's history, there have been people that have used the Bible to try to prop up slavery, but the Bible is anti-slavery. 3:06 In fact, men of God like William Wilberforce used the Bible itself in order to strike down and make illegal slavery. 3:14 In fact, Paul writes to Timothy in 1 Timothy chapter 1, and he says this, he says, Now we know that the law is good, for if one uses it lawfully, understanding this, that the law is not laid down for the just, but for the lawless and disobedient, for the ungodly and sinners, for the unholy and profane. 3:34 And then he's going to give a list of things that are ungodly, that are sinful, that are unholy and profane. 3:40 Those who strike their fathers and mothers, murderers, sexually immoral, men who practice homosexuality, enslavers, literally in Greek that word means man stealer, liars, perjurers, whatever else is contrary to sound doctrine, in accordance with the gospel of the glory of the blessed God, with which we have been entrusted. 4:00 So what he's saying here, what what Paul tells Timothy is that enslaving, as we know slavery in America, is anti-biblical. 4:09 When Paul says that he and Timothy are servants or do loss of Christ Jesus, what that means is that typically in the first century, the kind of slavery it was talking about is someone would also owe someone else a debt and they would become a bond servant to pay back that debt. 4:26 What Paul is saying is that I have been purchased by the blood of Jesus Christ, therefore I owe my entire life to Jesus, so I'm going to spend all of my life as a debt of service to him. 4:39 So he says, Paul and Timothy, servants of Christ Jesus, that is who is writing this letter. 4:45 What I want to point out here is that Paul and Timothy, their primary identity is not in their past or their upbringing, but they are primarily identified by King Jesus. 4:56 And they, both Paul and Timothy, are going to spend the rest of their lives serving King Jesus, who paid their debt regardless of their circumstances. 5:06 So now, let's flip the mirror. 5:08 If you were to look in the mirror and look at yourself, who do you see? 5:12 Do you know that God knew exactly what he was getting when he chose you, when he called you, when he paid for you, when he adopted you? 5:18 And do not let your past divine your future, but let the reality that you are a bond servant of Christ Jesus drive everything you do for all of your life. 5:29 Amen.