Sunday, March 25, 2018

Question about Sermon Writing



Someone with Seminary Experience wrote:
Please accept my compliments on today's sermon.  I've listened to it twice so far.  Perhaps one day you will walk me through your sermon-writing process.

***

GJ - I will write down some basics, in case they help anyone.

I work on doctrinal and Scriptural issues all week, so often something is on my mind when I am writing the sermon.

We use the KJV for readings and The Lutheran Hymnal for hymns. I use a wide variety of hymns from TLH, with an emphasis on Luther and Reformation hymns.

We only use the historic one-year pericopes, because we grow from repetition of the Word, which was always the idea. Luther's sermons, Lenker edition, follow the same set of readings.

If I preached on the Epistle lesson last year, I normally use the Gospel for the current sermon. And vice versa.

I used to simply quote from Luther's sermon for that reading, but I realized that more people will read Luther if I post one or more of the sermons each week. I try to get it posted Saturday and linked on Facebook. I read through it again before I start.

I often open Lenski for that passage and quote Lenski.

Two things are very important:

  1. The sermon must be written out completely, because writing makes a precise mind. In this Internet age, we owe people a form they can easily share with others via email, etc. We also save the Ustream file. If everyone published the written sermon, the plagiarism would jump up and do jumping jacks because of those buying or sharing sermons.
  2. The sermon is almost always preached without any manuscript available. The notes are the text. Eye contact, even with a camera, is important. Classroom experience has taught me that reading a text to someone is not effective.
  3. It is always a new sermon, never borrowed from the past, though I have a deep barrel - this blog.
This works for me because I finish writing the sermon early on Sunday morning. then it is fresh for me. Others may want to vary this, but completing it early has not worked for me. 



The Content
The purpose of the text is to teach faith in Christ. It is not for political action, fund-raising, joke telling, or adoration of the synod. 

People visit with me all week, by FB, email, even by phone. I also visit our neighborhood twice a day and see local people. People give me ideas about what bothers them. That definitely becomes part of the mix.

Ministers are obliged to teach the truth of the text and nothing else. In many cases, the Biblical text alone has enough in it to write a small book. 

If there is a miracle, I ask what lesson is being taught by the miracle. Sometimes there is a major lesson and a minor one. Parables offer a lot variety because so much is said in a few words.

I will go back to Luther, Lenski, and some classic passages in theology when I am getting stuck, such as on the robbery of Philippians 2:5ff. 

I also feel obliged to mention false doctrine, often from rationalism, that is applied to texts. I was blessed with three great Biblical professors at Yale. They emphasized the text above all else, but they also knew the theories and discussed them. Today I dealt with "the mind of Christ" as if Jesus did not consider Himself the Messiah. I also dismissed the idea that Paul never wrote about the Virgin Birth when this Philippians passage exalted His Incarnation. I suppose Moses never mentioned the Virgin Birth either, though the Burning Bush illustrates the Two Natures, just as Romans 1 does.

So I go through the Biblical text and teach what that is teaching. I try to be clear and plain. I tend to omit things preaching that were written down, but they are there for people to study. Sometimes I link material that cannot be discussed at length in a sermon.

I continue to be astonished and inspired by Luther's sermons. I have copied hundreds of his statements into a database and worked on the Gems Mined from Luther's Sermons. In short, I am saturated with Luther's thought and also admire Melanchthon and Chemnitz as well.

Stories
True to life stories are good in a sermon. Borrowing stories is not a good idea. A story is a verbal graphic. The abstract idea sticks to a narrative because the story is more personal. 

The Gracious Nature of Christ
There should always be a clear emphasis on the gracious nature of Christ and forgiveness through faith in Him. Jesus was very clear about this. The Holy Spirit's work in the church is convicting the world of sin - because they believe not on Me. That is the foundational sin. That continues to be shocking for many. Carnal sin is still sin, but making that primary is not in harmony with Jesus' farewell sermon in John 16.

Ministers should also have complete confidence through Isaiah 55:8ff and Romans 10. The Sower and the Seed should guide us in abundant sowing - as many ways as possible. We share the written sermons freely over the Net and serve a large group of people stuck under snow or keeping their flu to themselves at home.

I never finish a sermon feeling great confidence in what I said, but I do have endless confidence in the Word itself reaching people. Therefore, the sermon should quote other Scripture or refer to other Biblical passages as appropriate. 


Universal Grace - Universal Objective Justification - The CLC (sic) Teaches Against the Means of Grace

 The heirs of Walther-Stephan-Rambach are now completely divorced from the Means of Grace.
They simply repeat their UOJ inanities.


The UOJ Simpletons avoid

  1. Justification by Faith
  2. The Means of Grace, and
  3. The Efficacy of the Word

the way drunks avoid stepping off a curb. The UOJists know they will tumble and wet themselves in public if they dare take on the basics of John's Gospel, St. Paul, and the Book of Concord.

For a doctoral seminar at Notre Dame, I read dozens of books on the topics of election and grace, which involved Augustine, Pelagius, Calvin, Arminius, Roman Catholics versus the Jansenists - not ot mention Luther, Melanchthon, and others.



Universal Grace is an interesting topic, a concept specifically named by the Sleepy Eye pastor. Everyone in the world is forgiven - past, present, future - before they were born. The timeline is getting tangled already. But when does this take place?

  • Walther and Rambach say, the moment Christ rose from the dead, based on their perversion of 1 Timothy 3:16
  • But others say - the moment Christ died on the cross.
  • Still others claim - when the angels proclaimed peace on earth.

So we have three different moments of world absolution without faith.



But this tangle battles against the Means of Grace. The Scriptures nowhere name, suggest, or imply Universal Grace. However, the Bible does reveal to us -

The invisible Word of teaching and preaching - and the visible Word of the Sacraments - are the Means or Instruments of God's grace.

How do we know we are forgiven? We know that God distributes the treasure of the Gospel by the Holy Spirit, using these Means or Instruments. The treasure is the atoning death and victorious resurrection of the Savior.



Jesus is the righteousness of God, a righteousness we receive only through faith. We do not honor the grace of God by making unbelievers and apostates the objects.

Justification is not a term to be played with, the way a magician handles his gimmicks to make us believe something that is not true. A good magician can even tell us what he is going to do and make us believe his special abilities allowed him to accomplish it.

The UOJ Magicians and Soothsayers want to change God's justification of the individual believer into Universal Grace. They may call it by the bastard name used by John Sparky Brenner - Abracadabra! -The Justification of the World. Or they may call it by another name never found in the Scriptures or Book of Concord - Shazam! - Objective Justification.

Certainly, the concept of Universal Absolution was already taught by many false teachers before it became the stigmata of the Synodical Conference. Rationalists cling to it, and that is where Pietism emerges from the swamp of Enthusiasm.



Some leave Pietism for the efficacious Word in the Means of Grace, because the Scriptures teach that Gospel with clarity and precision. But others are blinded by the subjectivism of Pietism and long for a reasonable religion. What is more reasonable than saying that everyone is forgiven and saved? What is more popular for the moment? What makes an easier club to subdue those loyal to the Reformation?

All those advantages pale in comparison with the peace that comes from the revealed Gospel in contrast with the fake peace of Universalism. The false prophets say "Peace! Peace!" where there is no peace.

Some people should shudder at what they have done to the Scriptures.


When Will the Sectarians Recognize the Chief Article of Christianity? -
Justification by Faith!


Any doctrine that cannot be "rhymed" with the doctrine of justification, bears on its face the brand of apostasy from the one revealed truth and stands disclosed as a false interpretation of Scripture. For this article of justification is "the chief topic of Christian doctrine, which, understood aright, illumines and magnifies the honor of Christ (which is of especial service for the clear, correct understanding of the entire Holy Scriptures, and alone shows the way to the unspeakable treasure and right knowledge of Christ and alone opens the door to the entire Bible." (Ap. Art. 4, Phila. Ed., p. 84.) "If this article is apprehended and kept with a sure and firm faith, the other articles will gradually follow. For in the same all articles of our faith are comprehended; if that is kept pure, the others are taken good care of." – Schmidt. _Intuitu Fidei_, Part 3.

 The opening of Romans 5 is a perfect summary of Romans 4, featuring Abraham - the example of Justification by Faith.

From Sleepy Eye, Minnesota - Where the CLC (sic) Teaches Judas Iscariot Is Forgiven in Hell

 The pastor quotes WELS and LCMS for UOJ -
why are all these false teachers separated brethren?



Mayhew's father-in-law is Paul Tiefel, a stand out false teacher in the CLC (sic). Redlin said of him and Koenig, "They are always getting into trouble and never listen to anyone."

At the 15 minute mark, this Church of the Lutheran Confession (sic) pastor teaches Universal Objective Justification - Universal Grace (Calvinism) - and Judas Iscariot forgiven in Hell.

"Judas is in Hell with his sins forgiven." How is that possible? Because of Objective Justification!

New Ulm is midway between Sleepy Eye and Mankato,
two cities named after Indian chiefs.
Old Doc Mayo was involved to some extent in the Indian war there.


These yahoos are always yawping about Justification by Faith being Calvinism. However, Calvin taught Universal Grace.

He tries to say that Subjective Justification is Personal Justification, which is faith. However, that is wrong according to Walther, JP Meyer, and other false prophets. They make Subjective Justification a decision to accept Universal Absolution without faith.

The evidence -

 You must accept the general absolution of the world.


UOJ and Church Growth are bosom buddies, as Valleskey has proven, but figs do not grow on thistles, and the Israelites did not steal the Egyptian garbage.





Make a decision, accept or decline!

This so-called Bible study is nothing but a collection of rationalistic claims without Biblical evidence. The pastor stumbles into Calvinism and condemns the very dogma he finds in the Geneva Reformer.

 Gather these UOJ robots into a unified sect where they can go down together in peace and harmony.


Palm Sunday, The Sixth Sunday in Lent, 2018. Philippians 2:5-11


Palm Sunday, The Sixth Sunday in Lent, 2018


Pastor Gregory L. Jackson




The Hymn #160         All Glory, Laud             
The Confession of Sins
The Absolution
The Introit p. 16
The Gloria Patri
The Kyrie p. 17
The Gloria in Excelsis
The Salutation and Collect p. 19
The Epistle and Gradual          
The Gospel              
Glory be to Thee, O Lord!
Praise be to Thee, O Christ!
The Nicene Creed p. 22
The Sermon Hymn # 162                 Ride On                 

The Love of Christ


The Preface p. 24
The Sanctus p. 26
The Lord's Prayer p. 27
The Words of Institution
The Agnus Dei p. 28
The Nunc Dimittis p. 29
The Benediction p. 31
The Hymn #341                Crown Him with Many Crowns                          

KJV Philippians 2:5 Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus: 6 Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God: 7 But made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men: 8 And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross. 9 Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him, and given him a name which is above every name: 10 That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth; 11 And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.

KJV Matthew 21:1 And when they drew nigh unto Jerusalem, and were come to Bethphage, unto the mount of Olives, then sent Jesus two disciples, 2 Saying unto them, Go into the village over against you, and straightway ye shall find an ass tied, and a colt with her: loose them, and bring them unto me. 3 And if any man say ought unto you, ye shall say, The Lord hath need of them; and straightway he will send them. 4 All this was done, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet, saying, 5 Tell ye the daughter of Sion, Behold, thy King cometh unto thee, meek, and sitting upon an ass, and a colt the foal of an ass. 6 And the disciples went, and did as Jesus commanded them, 7 And brought the ass, and the colt, and put on them their clothes, and they set him thereon. 8 And a very great multitude spread their garments in the way; others cut down branches from the trees, and strawed them in the way. 9 And the multitudes that went before, and that followed, cried, saying, Hosanna to the Son of David: Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord; Hosanna in the highest.

Palm Sunday

Almighty and everlasting God, who hast caused Thy beloved Son to take our nature upon Himself, that He might give all mankind the example of humility and suffer death upon the cross for our sins: Mercifully grant us a believing knowledge of this, and that, following the example of His patience, we may be made partakers of the benefits of His sacred passion and death, through the same, Thy beloved Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true God, world without end. Amen.


The Love of Christ

KJV Philippians 2:5 Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus: 6 Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God:

1. Here Paul again presents to us as a powerful example of the celestial and eternal fire, the love of Christ, for the purpose of persuading us to exercise a loving concern for one another. The apostle employs fine words and precious admonitions, having perceived the indolence and negligence displayed by Christians in this matter of loving. For this the flesh is responsible. The flesh continually resists the willing spirit, seeking its own interest and causing sects and factions. Although a sermon on this same text went forth in my name a few years ago, entitled “The Twofold Righteousness,” the text was not exhausted; therefore we will now examine it word by word. “Have this mind in you, which was also in Christ Jesus.”

I noticed in reading about mainline apostasy that they loved to use the term "the mind of Christ." They were always citing "the mind of Christ," but what they really meant was - nevermind. In their own thoughts, these great scholars assumed that Jesus was an invention of Paul and the disciples, so we really need to honor the Messiah as an ordinary man. That is the overwhelming consensus of the modern Biblical professionals and the hip translators, so they have no connection with the text at all.

Paul teaches in this passage about the way the mission of Christ should influence all of our thoughts and deeds. The setting for this passage is what precedes it - 

2:3 Let nothing be done through strife or vainglory; but in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than themselves.Look not every man on his own things, but every man also on the things of others.
Verse 5 is a transition into verses, whether poetry, a hymn, or a creed that they already know. I think of these passages as all three, poetic and hymnic and credal. Moreover, Paul is reminding them of what they already know by heart.

People memorized a lot in those days because paper, leather, and scribes were expensive. The more we save on a computer or printed in a book, the less we remember. My computer instructor bought one of the first smart phones because he could not remember his appointments.

Passages like this are anchors for our thoughts and behavior. Knowing the personality of Christ gives us a model of our own. Attributes of Christ should be our attributes.

Instead of arguing against factions and selfishness, Paul says in the clearest words - Christ was and is God in essence. There are many ways to try to express this. The fulness of the Godhead dwelt in Him, so He was/is not one third of the Trinity but God Himself. He exists from eternity and He is the Creating Word of Genesis 1.

Let me give a teeny-tiny example of authority. The postman began talking about roses with me because I was working on mine in the front yard. His wife did not like to prune them. He knew better. I got him Creation Gardening and said, "The roses in the book are my roses from this garden." That was a way for him to say, "If you want roses like this, prune them." The book necessarily says, "If you want roses like this, follow the principles of Creation."

So when Jesus was addressing the crowds and His opponents, He was doing so as the Creating Word. That is what Paul means by "not robbing God." How can God rob God? Therefore, since Jesus was and is God, we should first of all consider all He did for us and imitate His example, His words, His attitude toward others.

As the eternal Son of God, the I AM of the Burning Bush, Jesus carried out His mission to show us the true, gracious, loving character of God.

Verse 6 introduces the majesty of the Son of God. That belongs to Him from eternity, but the form of of a servant is a mission He willingly took upon Himself, in obedience to the Father's will.

 Norma A. Boeckler


7 But made himself of no reputation (a),  and took upon him the form of a servant (b), and was made in the likeness of men (c):

We do not have any claims of our own, although many people assert special roles. That is always amusing when someone mentions a predecessor who was known for something - or should be. What does the grandfather's life have to do with the grandson? Is this a royal dynasty? I found that amusing when a high school graduate said, "You don't know who my mother is?" I almost said, "Do you know who MY mother is?" 

This is why the great and powerful ignore and even hate Jesus, because His divine form challenges their pretensions - and worse - He willingly gave up all claims to be our Savior. Faith in Him as the Suffering Servant of Isaiah 53 and the crucified in Psalm 22 - that is the essence of the Christian Faith. This truth offends the liberal philosophers who like Jesus as a liberal philosopher but not as their Savior. 

Thus the unbelieving world, made up of many outwardly religious people, will always be offended by Jesus. Those Messianic claims are more than offensive in our sense of the word - they are death-triggers that expose the lack of faith and the lack of humility in those people. They want people to tremble at their word - they do not tremble at God's Word.

Here is a three-part step down from divinity, like The Prince and the Pauper. Giving up His royal form, He:
  1. Surrendered any reputation He might have as the Son of God. He performed miracles to verify His Word, but He refrained from constantly proving this and becoming a walking wonder-man. The fakes pretend to slay people with their divine, spiritual power.
  2. He willingly took on the image of a servant, such as washing His disciples feet, an act Peter found astonishing. He walked from town to town, became thirsty, did not use His divine power to make things easy for Him.
  3. Because of His Incarnation, people saw an ordinary man, not the great Messiah mounted for war. It was like dressing up as a hobo and walking into a bank, asking for a personal banker. How far would that go?
8 And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.

This is the great miracle of the Bible. I find it odd that people choke on Creation, or the Genesis Flood, or any given miracle. The Word becoming flesh is the greatest miracle of all because the Son willingly gave up the form of divine majesty in order to serve us by dying on the cross for our sins. He remained God in every sense of the Word but appeared to be an ordinary human being. On several occasions, being surrounded by angry crowds did not limit Him at all, because of His divinity (the non-reciprocity of the second genus). His human nature did not limit His divine nature, but the crowds only saw the human form most of the time.

When waves crashed around the boat, the disciples thought of Jesus as a man. But He walked on the water and stilled the storm. 

This is our conundrum today. We have God revealed to us and all His attributes are displayed in Christ, but we comprehend only human attributes. How could God pay for our sins? How could God help us in time of need? Both require and enact the Word of God, which can move mountains and raise the dead in an instant.

We can see three steps in this poetic credal hymn
  1. And being found in fashion as a man, 
  2. he humbled himself, 
  3. and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.
9 Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him, and given him a name which is above every name:

This brings us to a two-part transition, from the mission of the Suffering Servant to His exaltation as the King of Kings. This is a classic Old Testament style of verse. The same truth is revealed two different ways:
  1. God has highly exalted Him.
  2. God has given Him a Name above every name.

These proclamations support and strengthen faith. The great truth of the Atonement is that Jesus allowed Himself to be the bait on the hook (an early church comparison) so that Satan seized the bait - "I will kill this usurper of my power!" and found himself caught by the Gospel. His wealth, weapons, and power which he Satan trusted are taken away. As the loser, the spoils go to the army of Christ, no longer enslaved but given great wealth and freedom. The believer is so powerful through the Word of the Gospel that no Satanic attack can defeat him.

What about persecution and death for believing in Christ? Since the beginning, the Gospel has grown and thrived through persecution and death. People forget that the greatest empire on earth was knocked into the dustbin by the Gospel. The martyrs in the stadiums took their deaths so well that Imperial Rome was shocked and shaken by their ancient pagan beliefs. The Christian Faith thrived in Rome where it was most persecuted, and Constantine created a new capital for the Empire to get away from pagan influence. He took the grand features of Rome and moved them to Constantinople for a Christian city, a Christian Empire that preserved the manuscripts and Greek culture for 1100 years, spreading into Europe (by persecution, the Ottoman Muslims) to create the Renaissance.

The attributes of Christ - meek, lowly, and willing to die for others - became the attributes of Christians. These actions and attributes were repeated during the Reformation when the new Rome burned Lutherans at the stake and rejoiced at their deaths.

10 That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth; 

Even now, people bow and curtsy before royalty. But this will be an action that will be appropriate for all people alike. At the return of Christ, there will be no doubt and every knee will bend to acknowlede His divine majesty. Even the devils will confess to that truth.

11 And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.

This is why people think of this passage as a credal hymn. What the Son of God has done is objective fact. But not everyone confesses this truth. Many have their own ideas and spend their lives attacking this truth, one way or another.

Confessing this truth comes from faith, and faith is a creation of God through the Holy Spirit in the Word. As Luther said about Easter, since Jesus has done everything for us, there is nothing else to do (alternatively, the greatest thing we can do) - but take this Gospel to our neighbor. That is done with art, books, worship, hymns, and conversation. "Be prepared to give a reason for the hope that is within you." We do not have to go to pagans, since paganism surrounds us. Pagans come to us - sometimes knocking on the door to attack the Gospel. Pagans offer up reasons why they are against the Christian Faith, but this is like chess. Every attack opens up a weakness to exploit.

We are New Creations through the Word of God. We know that when the Gospel makes us joyful, relieved, at peace, and eager to  serve Him.

 Altar design and graphic by Norma A. Boeckler

Luther's Sermon for Palm Sunday - Philippians 2:5-11



PALM SUNDAY


TEXT: PHILIPPIANS 2:5-11. 5 Have this mind in you, which was also in Christ Jesus: 6 who, existing in the form of God, counted not the being on an equality with God a thing to be grasped, 7 but emptied himself, taking the form of a servant, being made in the likeness of men; 8 and being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, becoming obedient even unto death, yea, the death of the cross. 9 Wherefore also God highly exalted him, and gave unto him the name which is above every name; 10 that in the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven and things on earth and things under the earth, and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.

CHRIST AN EXAMPLE OF LOVE.

1. Here Paul again presents to us as a powerful example of the celestial and eternal fire, the love of Christ, for the purpose of persuading us to exercise a loving concern for one another. The apostle employs fine words and precious admonitions, having perceived the indolence and negligence displayed by Christians in this matter of loving. For this the flesh is responsible. The flesh continually resists the willing spirit, seeking its own interest and causing sects and factions. Although a sermon on this same text went forth in my name a few years ago, entitled “The Twofold Righteousness,” the text was not exhausted; therefore we will now examine it word by word. “Have this mind in you, which was also in Christ Jesus.”

2. You are Christians; you have Christ, and in him and through him all fullness of comfort for time and eternity: therefore nothing should appeal to your thought, your judgment, your pleasure, but that which was in the mind of Christ concerning you as the source of your welfare. For his motive throughout was not his own advantage; everything he did was done for your sake and in your interest. Let men therefore, in accord with his example, work every good thing for one another’s benefit. “Who, existing in the form of God, counted not the being on an equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking the form of a servant.” [“Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God; but made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant.”] 3. If Christ, who was true God by nature, has humbled himself to become servant of all, how much more should such action befit us who are of no worth, and are by nature children of sin, death and the devil! Were we similarly to humble ourselves, and even to go beyond Christ in humility — a thing, however, impossible — we should do nothing extraordinary. Our humility would still reek of sin in comparison with his. Suppose Christ to humble himself in the least degree — but a hair’s breadth, so to speak — below the most exalted angels; and suppose we were to humble ourselves to a position a thousand times more abased than that of the devils in hell; yet our humility would not compare in the least with that of Christ. For he is an infinite blessing — God himself — and we are but miserable creatures whose existence and life are not for one moment secure.

4. What terrible judgment must come upon those who fail to imitate the ineffable example of Christ; who do not humble themselves below their neighbors and serve them, but rather exalt themselves above them! Indeed, the example of Christ may well terrify the exalted, and those high in authority; and still more the self-exalted. Who would not shrink from occupying the uppermost seat and from lording it over others when he sees the Son of God humble and eliminate himself?

5. The phrase “form of God” does not receive the same interpretation from all. Some understand Paul to refer to the divine essence and nature in Christ; meaning that Christ, though true God, humbled himself. While Christ is indeed true God, Paul is not speaking here of his divine essence, which is concealed. The word he uses — “morphe,” or “forma” — he employs again where he tells of Christ taking upon himself the form of a servant. “Form of a servant” certainly cannot signify “essence of a real servant” — possessing by nature the qualities of a servant. For Christ is not our servant by nature; he has become our servant from good will and favor toward us. For the same reason “divine form” cannot properly mean “divine essence”; for divine essence is not visible, while the divine form was truly seen. Very well; then let us use the vernacular, and thus make the apostle’s meaning clear.

6. “Form of God,” then, means the assumption of a divine attitude and bearing, or the manifestation of divinity in port and presence; and this not privately, but before others, who witness such form and bearing. To speak in the clearest possible manner: Divine bearing and attitude are in evidence when one manifests in word and deed that which pertains peculiarly to God and suggests divinity. Accordingly, “the form of a servant” implies the assumption of the attitude and bearing of a servant in relation to others. It might be better to render “Morphe tu dulu,” by “the bearing of a servant,” that means, manners of such character that whoever sees the person must take him for a servant. This should make it clear that the passage in question does not refer to the manifestation of divinity or servility as such, but to the characteristics and the expression of the same. For, as previously stated, the essence is concealed, but its manifestation is public. The essence implies a condition, while its expression implies action.

7. As regards these forms, or manifestations, a threefold aspect is suggested by the words of Paul. The essence may exist without the manifestation; there may be a manifestation without the corresponding essence; and finally, we may find the essence together with its proper manifestation. For instance, when God conceals himself and gives no indication of his presence, there is divinity, albeit not manifest. This is the case when he is grieved and withdraws his grace. On the other hand, when he discloses his grace, there is both the essence and its manifestation. But the third aspect is inconceivable for God, namely, a manifestation of divinity without the essence. This is rather a trick of the devil and his servants, who usurp the place of God and act as God, though they are anything but divine. An illustration of this we find in Ezekiel 28:2, where the king of Tyre is recorded as representing his heart, which was certainly decidedly human, as that of a god.

8. Similarly, the form, or bearing, of a servant may be considered from a threefold aspect. One may be a servant and not deport himself as such, but as a lord, or as God; as in the instance just mentioned. Of such a one Solomon speaks ( Proverbs 29:21), saying: “He that delicately bringeth up his servant from a child shall have him become a son at the last.” Such are all the children of Adam. We who are rightly God’s servants would be God himself. This is what the devil taught Eve when he said, “Ye shall be as God.” Genesis 3:5. Again, one may be a servant and conduct himself as one, as all just and faithful servants behave before the world; and as all true Christians conduct themselves in God’s sight, being subject to him and serving all men. Thirdly, one may be not a servant and yet behave as one.

For instance, a king might minister to his servants before the world. Before God, however, all men being servants, this situation is impossible with men: no one has so done but Christ. He says at the supper ( John 13:13-14): “Ye call me, Teacher, and, Lord: and ye say well; for so I am,” and yet I am among you as a servant. And in another place ( Matthew 20:28), “The Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister.”

9. From these explanations Paul’s meaning must have become clear. His thought is: Christ was in the form of God; that is, both the essence and the bearing of Deity were his. He did not assume the divine form as he did that of a servant. He was, I repeat it; he was in the form of God. The little word “was” expresses that divinity was his both in essence and form. The meaning is: Many assume and display an appearance of divinity, but are not themselves actually divine; the devil, for instance, and Anti-christ and Adam’s children. This is sacrilege — the assumption of divinity by an act of robbery. See Romans 2:22. Though the offender does not look upon such conduct as robbery, it is none the less robbing divine honor, and is so regarded by God and angels and saints, and even by his own conscience.

But Christ, who had not come by divinity through arrogating it to himself, but was divine by nature according to his very essence, did not deem his divinity a thing he had grasped; nor could he, knowing divinity to be his very birthright, and holding it as his own natural possession from eternity.

10. So Paul’s words commend Christ’s essential divinity and his love toward us, and at the same time correct all who falsely assume a divine form. Such are we all so long as we are the devil’s members. The thought is: The devil’s members all would be God, would rob the divinity they do not possess; and they must admit their action to be robbery, for conscience testifies, indeed must testify, that they are not God. Though they may despise the testimony of conscience and fail to heed it, yet the testimony stands, steadfastly maintaining the act as not right — as a malicious robbery.

But the one man, Christ, who did not assume the divine form but was in it by right and had a claim upon it from eternity; who did not and could not hold it robbery to be equal with God; this man humbled himself, taking upon him the form of a servant — not his rightful form — that he by the power of his winning example, might induce them to assume the bearing of servants who possessed the form and character of servants, but who, refusing to own them, appropriated the appearance of divinity upon which they had no claim, since the essence of divinity was forever beyond them.

11. That some fail to understand readily this great text, is due to the fact that they do not accept Paul’s words as spoken, but substitute their own ideas of what he should have said, namely: Christ was born true God and did not rob divinity, etc. The expression “who, existing in the form of God” sounds, in the Greek and Latin, almost as if Christ had merely borne himself as God, unless particular regard be given to the words “existing in,” which Paul contrasts with the phrase “took upon him.” Christ took upon himself the form of a servant, it is true, but in that form was no real servant. Just so, while dispensing with a divine appearance, behind the appearance chosen was God. And we likewise take upon ourselves the divine form, but in the form we are not divine; and we spurn the form of servants, though that is what we are irrespective of appearance. Christ disrobes himself of the divine form wherein he existed, to assume that of a servant, which did not express his essential character; but we lay aside the servant form of our real being and take upon ourselves, or arrogate to ourselves, the form of God to which we are not fitted by what we are in reality.

12. They are startled by this expression also: “Christ thought it not robbery to be equal with God.” Now, at first sight these words do not seem to refer solely to Christ, since even the devil and his own, who continually aspire to equality with God, do not think their action robbery in spite of the testimony of their conscience to the contrary. But with Paul the little word “think,” or “regard,” possesses a powerful significance, having the force of “perfect assurance.” Similarly he says ( Romans 3:28), “We reckon therefore that a man is justified by faith apart from the works of the law”; and ( 1 Corinthians 7:40), “I think [deem] that I also have the spirit of God.” But the wicked cannot boast it no robbery when they dare take upon themselves the form of God; for they know, they are satisfied in themselves, that they are not God. Christ, however, did not, nor could he, think himself not equal to God; in other words, he was confident of his equality with God, and knew he had not stolen the honor.

Paul’s words are chosen, not as an apology for Christ, but as a severe rebuke for those who arrogate to themselves the form of God against the protest of conscience that it is not their own but stolen. The apostle would show how infinitely Christ differs from them, and that the divine form they would take by theft is Christ’s by right.

13. Paul does not use this expression, however, when he refers to Christ’s assumption of the servant form which is his, not by nature, but by assumption. The words produce the impression that Christ took by force something not his own. Paul should be expected to say: “He held it not robbery to assume the form of a servant.” Why should he rather have chosen that form of expression in the first instance, since Christ did not assume the divine form, but possessed it as his very own — yes, laid it aside and assumed a form foreign to his nature? The substance of the matter is that he who becomes a servant does not and cannot assume anything, but only gives, giving even himself. Hence there is no warrant here to speak of robbery or of a disposition to look upon the matter in this light.

On the other hand, assumption of the divine form necessarily involves taking, and altogether precludes giving. Hence there is warrant to speak of robbery in this connection, and of men who so view it. But this charge cannot be brought against Christ. He does not render himself guilty of robbery, nor does he so view his relation, as all others must do. Divinity is his by right, and so is its appropriate form a birthright.

14. Thus, it seems to me, this text very clearly teaches that to have divine form is simply to assume in regard to others, in word and deed, the bearing of God and Lord; and that Christ meets this test in the miraculous signs and life-giving words, as the Gospels contend. He does not rank with the saints who lack the divine essence; he has, in addition to divine form, the divine essence and nature. On the other hand, the servant, or servile, form implies acting toward others, in word and deed, like a servant. Thus Christ did when he served the disciples and gave himself for us. But he served not as the saints, who are servants by nature. Service was, with him, something assumed for our benefit and as an example for us to follow, teaching us to act in like manner toward others, to disrobe ourselves of the appearance of divinity as he did, as we shall see.

15. Unquestionably, then, Paul proclaims Christ true God. Had he been mere man, what would have been the occasion for saying that he became like a man and was found in the fashion of other men? and that he assumed the form of a servant though he was in form divine? Where would be the sense in my saying to you, “You are like a man, are made in the fashion of a man, and take upon yourself the form of a servant”? You would think I was mocking you, and might appropriately reply: “I am glad you regard me as a man; I was wondering if I were an ox or a wolf. Are you mad or foolish?” Would not that be the natural rejoinder to such a foolish statement? Now, Paul not being foolish, nor being guilty of foolish speech, there truly must have been something exalted and divine about Christ. For when the apostle declares that he was made like unto other men, though the fact of his being human is undisputed, he simply means that the man Christ was God, and could, even in his humanity, have borne himself as divine. But this is precisely what he did not do; he refrained: he disrobed himself of his divinity and bore himself as a mere man like others.

16. What follows concerning Christ, now that we understand the meaning or “form of God” and “form of a servant,” is surely plain. In fact, Paul himself tells us what he means by “form of a servant.” First: He makes the explanation that Christ disrobed, or divested himself; that is, appeared to lay aside his divinity in that he divested himself of its benefit and glory. Not that he did, or could, divest himself of his divine nature; but that he laid aside the form of divine majesty — did not act as the God he truly was.

Nor did he divest himself of the divine form to the extent of making it unfelt and invisible; in that case there would have been no divine form left.

He simply did not affect a divine appearance and dazzle us by its splendor; rather he served us with that divinity. He performed miracles. And during his suffering on the cross he, with divine power, gave to the murderer the promise of Paradise. Luke 23:43. And in the garden, similarly, he repelled the multitude by a word. John 18:6.

Hence Paul does not say that Christ was divested by some outside power; he says Christ “made himself” of no repute. Just so the wise man does not in a literal way lay aside wisdom and the appearance of wisdom, but discards them for the purpose of serving the simple-minded who might fittingly serve him. Such man makes himself of no reputation when he divests himself of his wisdom and the appearance of wisdom.

17. Second: Christ assumed the form of a servant, even while remaining God and having the form of God; he was God, and his divine words and works were spoken and wrought for our benefit. As a servant, he served us with these. He did not require us to serve him in compensation for them, as in the capacity of a Lord he had a just right to do. He sought not honor or profit thereby, but our benefit and salvation. It was a willing service and gratuitously performed, for the good of men. It was a service unspeakably great, because of the ineffable greatness of the minister and servant — God eternal, whom all angels and creatures serve. He who is not by this example heartily constrained to serve his fellows, is justly condemned. He is harder than stone, darker than hell and utterly without excuse.

18. Third: “Being made in the likeness of men.” Born of Mary, Christ’s nature became human. But even in that humanity he might have exalted himself above all men and served none. But he forbore and became as other men. And by “likeness of men” we must understand just ordinary humanity without special privilege whatever. Now, without special privilege there is no disparity among men. Understand, then, Paul says in effect: Christ was made as any other man who has neither riches, honor, power nor advantage above his fellows; for many inherit power, honor and property by birth. So lowly did Christ become, and with such humility did he conduct himself, that no mortal is too lowly to be his equal, even servants and the poor. At the same time, Christ was sound, without bodily infirmities, as man in his natural condition might be expected to be.

19. Fourth. “And being found in fashion as a man.” That is, he followed the customs and habits of men, eating and drinking, sleeping and waking, walking and standing, hungering and thirsting, enduring cold and heat, knowing labor and weariness, needing clothing and shelter, feeling the necessity of prayer, and having the same experience as any other man in his relation to God and the world. He had power to avoid these conditions; as God he might have demeaned and borne himself quite differently. But in becoming man, as above stated, he fared as a human being, and be accepted the necessities of ordinary mortals while all the time he manifested the divine form which expressed his true self.

20. Fifth: “He humbled himself,” or debased himself. In addition to manifesting his servant form in becoming man and faring as an ordinary human being, he went farther and made himself lower than any man. He abased himself to serve all men with the supreme service — the gift of his life in our behalf.

21. Sixth: He not only made himself subject to men, but also to sin, death and the devil, and bore it all for us. He accepted the most ignominious death, the death on the cross, dying not as a man but as a worm ( Psalm 22:6); yes, as an arch-knave, a knave above all knaves, in that he lost even what favor, recognition and honor were due to the assumed servant form in which he had revealed himself, and perished altogether.

22. Seventh: All this Christ surely did not do because we were worthy of it.

Who could be worthy such service from such a one? Obedience to the Father moved him. Here Paul with one word unlocks heaven and permits us to look into the unfathomable abyss of divine majesty and to behold the ineffable love of the Fatherly heart toward us — his gracious will for us.

He shows us how from eternity it has been God’s pleasure that Christ, the glorious one who has wrought all this, should do it for us. What human heart would not melt at the joy-inspiring thought? Who would not love, praise and thank God and in return for his goodness, not only be ready to serve the world, but gladly to embrace the extremity of humility? Who would not so do when he is aware that God himself has such precious regard for him, and points to the obedience of his Son as the pouring out and evidence of his Fatherly will. Oh, the significance of the words Paul here uses! such words as he uses in no other place! He must certainly have burned with joy and cheer. To gain such a glimpse of God — surely this must be coming to the Father through Christ. Here is truly illustrated the truth that no one comes to Christ except the Father draw him; and with what power, what delicious sweetness, the Father allures! How many are the preachers of the faith who imagine they know it all, when they have received not even an odor or taste of these things! How soon are they become masters who have never been disciples! Not having tasted God’s love, they cannot impart it; hence they remain unprofitable babblers. “Wherefore also God highly exalted him.”

23. As Christ was cast to the lowest depths and subjected to all devils, in obeying God and serving us, so has God exalted him Lord over all angels and creatures, and over death and hell. Christ now has completely divested himself of the servant form — laid it aside. Henceforth he exists in the divine form, glorified, proclaimed, confessed, honored and recognized as God.

While it is not wholly apparent to us that “all things are put in subjection” to Christ, as Paul says ( 1 Corinthians 15:27), the trouble is merely with our perception of the fact. It is true that Christ is thus exalted in person and seated on high in the fullness of power and might, executing everywhere his will; though few believe the order of events is for the sake of Christ.

Freely the events order themselves, and the Lord sits enthroned free from all restrictions. But our eyes are as yet blinded. We do not perceive him there nor recognize that all things obey his will. The last day, however, will reveal it. Then we shall comprehend present mysteries; how Christ laid aside his divine form, was made man, and so on; how he also laid aside the form of a servant and resumed the divine likeness; how as God he appeared in glory; and how he is now Lord of life and death, and the King of Glory.

This must suffice on the text. For how we, too, should come down from our eminence and serve others has been sufficiently treated of in other postils. Remember, God desires us to serve one another with body, property, honor, spirit and soul, even as his Son served us.