Defiant Joy: A Study On PhilippiansSample
DAY 9: JOY THAT DEFIES CLICHÉS
Here we arrive at perhaps the most famous verse in all of Philippians. This verse is everywhere! Plastered across everything from bumper stickers to bracelets to t-shirts and framed art you can find these words:
I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.
This verse is incredibly popular. The trouble is, it is often taken out of context. Too often, these words are co-opted into a spiritual form of the American dream, upholding our ambitions for prosperity and personal success as if to say, “Through Christ, I can get that raise, buy that car, or afford the larger house!”
But this isn’t at all what Paul was saying. In order to understand it, this verse needs to be read within the broader chapter and letter, starting with the verses preceding it.
In verse 12, Paul offers a summary of all that he has endured throughout his life and ministry: “I know how to be brought low, and I know how to abound… I have learned the secret of facing plenty and hunger, abundance and need” (v. 12). Paul has seen it all. He has experienced poverty and prosperity, gain and loss. Through it all his joy has persevered, unaffected by his circumstances. How? Because of Christ: “I can do all these things through him who strengthens me.”
In short, Paul isn’t talking about personal prosperity through Christ. He is talking being content in Christ, whether or not prosperity comes. He can endure any hardship and still rejoice because it is Christ alone who strengthens him.
Plain and simple, Philippians 4:13 is about being content, no matter our circumstances.
Paul’s Habit of Joy
All of this gets to the heart of Philippians and this “joy” which Paul can’t stop talking about. His joy is not shiny or cliché. It’s not simple and easy and detached from what’s actually happening in the world. Paul wasn’t skipping around with a smile painted on his face. Instead, his joy was an act of willful defiance. This is exactly why Paul repeats the refrain again and again: “rejoice!”
Paul isn’t gushing here. He isn’t tap-dancing over his pain. Instead, he is making a choice. He is practicing the habit of joy which has shaped him into the man he has become. For Paul, and for us, joy is a discipline. It’s something we commit to—whether we feel like it or not— and over time our souls are transformed.
That’s why Philippians is such an important contribution to how we think about joy. It banishes all the clichés. Here is a man who is honest about his suffering and betrayal, which means we can be too. Grief does not lessen or dull the hope we have in Christ. The paradox of our faith is that we can hold sorrow and joy together in the same hands, even in the same moment. One doesn’t cancel out the other.
And let me tell you, the world needs this kind of joy. Fake joy isn’t cutting it, and neither is shallow joy. If we clamor after all the same things as the rest of the world—wealth, success, the perfect family, the perfect body—claiming them “in the name of Jesus,” we aren’t any different than anyone else. Our joy is based on all the same things.
But true Christian joy—the “foolish” illogical kind—is the kind of joy that endures no matter what comes. This is the kind we’re promised in Christ. This defiant joy is complicated and messy and it isn’t built in a day, but it is the gritty joy our gritty world is craving.
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About this Plan
Paul, a man in prison facing certain death, abandoned by friends and in the darkest moment of his life is FULL OF JOY. Philippians holds the key to standing out in the world, not with a mask of cheerfulness, but with a sincere heart of joy.
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