Odious and
Soon-Touchy Here is clear evidence of dissension in the Philippian church
. . . so serious, perhaps that this breach among the community may have been the real
reason for Pauls writing. [1] Notice the sensitivity with which Paul handles this
delicate situationhe affirms their value by recalling how have both have
"struggled beside me in the work of the gospel." Paul names his friends and
co-workers frequently, but rarely his enemies by name; such suggests that Paul viewed
Euodias and Syntyche as friends and thus, could encourage these great Christians to work
toward resolution.
Rejoice! Rejoice! Rejoice! What an interesting disposition of
the writerthe continual reference to joy or its cognates. Such is how Paul chooses
to view life! The paragraph also consists of a series of disconnected
commandsgentleness, dont worry, pray, think appropriately, do the right thing,
etc.
Whered He Get That? The final appeal is to think
virtuously. These virtues were certainly admired in the pagan world but not common in the
NT writings; some of the vocabulary appear only once. So from whence comes this list? Has
Paul happened upon waiting room literature? The conjectures are multiple; we simply
dont know where he comes up with such wonderful virtues to fill our head with. What
is clear is how Paul christianizes the list to say in essence, that anything and
everything that is praiseworthy is divine in origin. [2]
How do we in the
church handle our differences? What about our committees or teams? How does Paul advise
the Philippians to deal with conflict and disagreement?
- What do you do to relieve stress and worry in your life?
- How does your thinking affect how you feel? How does it affect your relationship to God?
Others?
Homily Idea: What we can learn
from Euodia and Syntyche?
Block #1Imaginatively explore what problems might lie behind
Es and Ss breach of friendship . . . weave current church conflict into the
imaginative reflection.
Block #2What does it mean to "be of the same mind?"
Thats Pauls proposal to bring closure to this rupture. Go back through the
epistle to discover potential clues, e.g. 2:2 (mind of Christ) and his elaboration of what
that looks like (2:3-4). Notice how being of the same mind is vitally and critically
connected to "in the Lord," which refers us back to the mind of Christ who
humbled himself and became obedient . . .
If Christ behaved like that [2:2ff], how must those who are "in Christ"
behave? Put like that, it is clear what Euodia and Synthyche should do. If they do not do
it, then they are denying that they are "in Christ . . . Should we, perhaps, worry
less about who is right and who is wrong and ask instead, "What does it mean for us,
as a community, to have the mind of Christ?" [3]
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[1] The New Interpreters Bible XI (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2000), page
539.
[2] Ibid, page 541.
[3] Ibid, page 547.