Verse 1
Philippians 3:1. Finally — Or
rather, as το λοιπον should be
here rendered, As for what
remains; or, what I have further
in view in writing this epistle.
For the expression cannot here
signify finally, as our
translators have rendered the
word, since the apostle is only
entering on the main subject of
his letter. Properly, it is a
form of transition, and is
translated besides, 1
Corinthians 1:16. It is as if he
had said, Whatever may become of
me, or of yourselves, so far as
any worldly interest or prospect
is concerned, rejoice in the
Lord Christ — In the knowledge
you have of him, and of the
truths and promises of his
gospel; in the faith you have in
him; the union you have with him
by that faith; the relations in
which you stand to him as his
friends, his brethren, his
spouse; in the conformity you
have to him in heart and life,
and in the expectations you have
from him of felicity and glory
eternal. These are sufficient
causes for rejoicing, whatever
circumstances you may be in, and
whatever your trials and
troubles may be in this present
short and uncertain life.
Reader, hast thou these reasons
for rejoicing?
Then thou mayest well bear
without impatience or discontent
the light afflictions which are
but for a moment, 2 Corinthians
4:17.
To write the same things — Which
you have heard from me before,
or which I have written to other
churches, and which I have
desired Epaphroditus to tell
you; to me indeed is not
grievous — Nothing was accounted
grievous or troublesome by him
which was for the edification of
the church; but for you it is
safe — It will tend to preserve
you from the errors and sins in
which you might otherwise be
insnared. The condemnation of
the errors of the Judaizers,
which the apostle was about to
write in this chapter, he had
already written in his epistles
to the Ephesians and Colossians.
But as they were matters of
great importance, he did not
grudge to write them in this
letter; because, if they were
only communicated to them
verbally, by Epaphroditus, or
others, all the Philippians
might not have had an
opportunity of hearing them, or
they might have misunderstood
them. Whereas, having them in
writing, they could examine them
at their leisure, and have
recourse to them as often as
they had occasion. St. Paul, we
may observe further, wrote most
of his epistles, partly at
least, with a view to confute
the erroneous doctrines and
practices of the Judaizing
teachers, who in the first age
greatly disturbed the churches
chiefly by their affirming, that
unless the Gentiles were
circumcised, after the manner of
Moses, they could not be saved —
But as these teachers artfully
suited their arguments to the
circumstances and prejudices of
the persons whom they addressed,
the controversy hath a new
aspect in almost every epistle.
And what the apostle advances in
confutation of their doctrine,
and for explaining and
establishing the genuine
doctrines of the gospel,
comprehends a variety of
particulars highly worthy of the
attention of Christians in every
age.
Verse 2
Philippians 3:2. Beware of dogs
— Unclean, unholy, rapacious
men, who, though they fawn and
flatter, would devour you as
dogs. He probably gave them this
appellation also, because they
barked against the doctrines of
the gospel, and against its
faithful teachers, and were
ready to bite and tear all who
opposed their errors. Our Lord
used the word dogs in the same
sense, when he commanded his
apostles not to give that which
is holy to dogs. Perhaps, by
calling them dogs, the apostle
might intend to signify
likewise, that, in the sight of
God, they were now become as
abominable, for crucifying
Christ, and persecuting his
apostles, as the idolatrous
heathen were in the eyes of the
Jews; who, to express their
detestation of them, gave them
the name of dogs; a title which
the apostle therefore here
returns upon themselves.
Revelation 22:15, the wicked are
called dogs: without are dogs.
Beware of evil workers — Of
those Judaizing teachers, who,
while they cry up the law, and
pretend to be strenuous
advocates for good works, are,
in fact, evil workers; sowing
the seeds of discord, strife,
contention, and division, among
the simple, humble, and formerly
united members of Christ, and
acting in direct opposition, not
only to the gospel, the true
nature of which they do not
understand, but even to the most
important precepts and grand
design of the law itself, for
the honour of which they appear
to be so zealous. Macknight
renders the expression, evil
labourers, in opposition to the
appellation of fellow-labourers,
with which the apostle honoured
those who faithfully assisted
him in preaching the gospel. The
same false teachers he calls
false apostles, and deceitful
workers, or labourers, 2
Corinthians 11:13; because,
instead of building, they
undermined the Church of Christ,
by removing its foundation;
beware of the concision —
Circumcision being now no longer
a rite of entering into covenant
with God, the apostle will not
call those who used it the
circumcision; but coins a term
on purpose, taken from a Greek
word used by the LXX., Leviticus
21:5, for such a cutting of the
flesh as God had forbidden. Dr.
Macknight renders the word the
excision: an appellation, says
he, “finely contrived to express
the pernicious influence of
their doctrine; and perhaps also
to signify the destruction which
was coming on them as a nation.”
He adds, “the account given of
these wicked men, Romans 16:18;
Galatians 6:12; Titus 1:11,
shows that they deserved all the
harsh names given them in this
place.”
Verse 3
Philippians 3:3. For we are the
circumcision — The true
spiritual seed of Abraham; who
have the things signified by
that sign, and perform that
which circumcision was designed
to engage men to. We are the
only people now in covenant with
God, who worship God in the
Spirit — Not barely in the
letter, or by a mere external
service, in attending outward
ordinances, but with the
spiritual worship of reverence
and fear, humility and
self-abasement, adoration and
praise, confidence and hope,
gratitude and love, subjection
and obedience; of true
repentance, living faith, and
genuine holiness; feeling within
ourselves, and manifesting to
others, those dispositions and
actions which are suited to the
divine perfections, and to the
relations in which he is pleased
to stand to us; and all this
through the influence of his
Spirit, which can only implant
these dispositions within us,
and enable us to conduct
ourselves accordingly. See this
spiritual worship further
explained in the note on John
4:23-24; and rejoice — Or,
glory, rather, as καυχωμενοι
signifies; in Christ Jesus — As
the procuring cause of all our
blessings, and the source of all
our consolations; and have no
confidence in the flesh — In any
outward advantage or
prerogative, or in any
performance of our own, past,
present, or to come, for
acceptance with God, or
justification before him.
Verse 4-5
Philippians 3:4-5. Though I —
Above many others; might have
confidence in the flesh — That
is, I have such pretences for
that confidence as many, even
Jews, have not. He says I, in
the singular number, because the
Philippian believers, being of
Gentile race, could not speak in
that manner. If any other man —
Gentile or Jew, private
Christian or public teacher;
thinketh that he hath whereof he
might trust in the flesh — That
he has cause for so doing; I
more — I have more reason to
think so than he. See 2
Corinthians 11:18-22.
Circumcised the eighth day — Not
at ripe age, as a proselyte, but
born among God’s peculiar
people, and dedicated to him
from my infancy, being solemnly
admitted into the visible
church, according to his
ordinance, in the most regular
and pure way. It is certain the
Jews did not only lay a great
deal of stress on the ceremony
of circumcision, but on the time
of performing it; affirming,
that circumcision before the
eighth day was no circumcision;
and after that time of less
value. Hence they thought it
necessary to circumcise a child
on the sabbath day, when that
day was the eighth from its
birth, (though all manner of
work was forbidden on that day,)
rather than defer performing the
rite to a day beyond that time,
John 7:22; and made it a rule
that the rest of the sabbath
must give place to circumcision.
And this opinion, as it agrees
with the text, Genesis 17:12, so
it seems to have obtained long
before our Lord’s time; for the
Septuagint and the Samaritan
version read Genesis 17:14 thus:
“The uncircumcised male, who is
not circumcised the eighth day,
shall be cut off: he hath broken
my covenant.” Of the stock of
Israel — Not the son of a
proselyte, nor of the race of
the Ishmaelites or Edomites; of
the tribe of Benjamin — In which
Jerusalem and the temple stood,
and who kept close to God and
his worship when the ten tribes
revolted, and fell off to
idolatry; a tribe descended from
the wife of the patriarch Jacob;
and on that account, as
Theodoret has observed, more
honourable than the four tribes
descended from Bilhah and
Zilpah, the handmaids; a Hebrew
of the Hebrews — Descended, by
both father and mother, from
Abraham’s race, without any
mixture of foreign blood. “The
Jews who lived among the Greeks,
and who spake their language,
were called Hellenists, Acts
6:1; Acts 9:29; Acts 11:20. Many
of these were descended from
parents, one of whom only was a
Jew. Of this sort was Timothy,
Acts 16:1. But those who were
born in Judea, of parents
rightly descended from Abraham,
and who, receiving their
education in Judea, spake the
language of their forefathers,
and were thoroughly instructed
in the laws and learning of the
Jews, were reckoned more
honourable than the Hellenists;
and to mark the excellence of
their lineage, education, and
language, they were called
Hebrews; a name the most
ancient, and therefore the most
honourable, of all names borne
by Abraham’s descendants. A
Hebrew, therefore, possessing
the character and qualifications
above described, was a more
honourable appellation than an
Israelite, as that name marked
no more but one’s being a member
of the commonwealth of Israel;
which a Jew might be, though
born and bred in a foreign
country.” — Macknight. As
touching the law, a Pharisee —
One of that sect who most
accurately observe it, and
maintain many of those great
truths of religion which the
Sadducees and some others
reject.
Verse 6
Philippians 3:6. Concerning zeal
— For the law and the Jewish
religion, and for all those
ritual observances which they so
eagerly enforce, I myself was
once so earnest, that I
persecuted, and that even to
imprisonment and death, those
who did not observe them.
Touching the righteousness which
is in the law — Which is
described and enjoined by the
letter of it; that is, with
respect to external observances;
blameless — Quite
unexceptionable in my conduct;
so that those who knew me most
intimately, could not have
accused me of any wilful
transgression, or of neglecting
any of those expiatory rites and
sacrifices, which were appointed
to be used in case of
involuntary errors. “The
greatest part of the Jews firmly
believed that the righteousness
required in the law consisted
chiefly in observing its ritual
precepts. And therefore, if a
person was circumcised, offered
the appointed sacrifices,
observed the sabbaths, and other
festivals enjoined by Moses,
made the necessary
purifications, in cases of
pollution, paid tithes of all he
possessed, and abstained from
crimes injurious to society; or
if he committed any such, was
punished for them according to
the law, he was, as the apostle
expresseth it, with respect to
the righteousness which is by
law, unblameable. Further, as
the ritual services enjoined in
the law were not founded in the
nature of things, but in the
command of God; and as,
according to the law, atonement
was made for some transgressions
by these services, they were, on
account of their being done from
a regard to the divine will,
considered as acts of piety more
acceptable to God than even the
performance of moral duties. In
the third place, as these ritual
services were both numerous and
burdensome, and recurred so
frequently, that they gave
almost constant employment to
the pious Israelites, the
diligent and exact performance
of them was thought equivalent
to a perfect righteousness, and
so meritorious, that it entitled
the performer to justification
and eternal life. All these
erroneous opinions Paul
entertained while he continued a
Pharisee. But he relinquished
them when he became a Christian,
as he informs us, immediately.”
— Macknight.
Verse 7
Philippians 3:7. But what things
— Of this nature; were once
reputed gain to me — Which I
valued myself upon, and confided
in for acceptance with God,
supposing them to constitute a
righteousness sufficient to
justify me in his sight; those,
ever since I was made acquainted
with the truth as it is in
Jesus, and embraced the gospel,
I have accounted loss — Things
of no value; things which ought
to be readily foregone for
Christ, in order that, placing
all my dependance on him for
justification, I might through
him be accepted of God, and be
saved. The word ζημια, here used
by the apostle, and rendered
loss, properly signifies loss
incurred in trade: and
especially that kind of loss
which is sustained at sea in a
storm, when goods are thrown
overboard for the sake of saving
the ship and the people on
board: in which sense the word
is used Acts 27:10; Acts 27:21.
To understand the term thus,
gives great force and beauty to
the passage. It is as if the
apostle said, In making the
voyage of life, for the purpose
of gaining salvation, I proposed
to purchase it with my
circumcision, and my care in
observing the ritual and moral
precepts of the law; and I put a
great value on these things, on
account of the gain or advantage
I was to make by them. But when
I became a Christian, I
willingly threw them all
overboard, as of no value in
purchasing salvation. And this I
did for the sake of gaining
salvation through faith in
Christ as my only Saviour.
Verses 8-11
Philippians 3:8-11. Yea
doubtless — Not only when I was
first converted, but I still
account both these and all
things else, how valuable
soever, to be but loss. Having
said, in the preceding verse,
that he counted his privileges
as a Jew, and his righteousness
by the law, to be loss, or
things to be thrown away, he
here adds, that he viewed in the
same light all the things which
men value themselves upon, and
on which they build their hope
of salvation: such as their
natural and acquired talents,
their knowledge, their moral
virtue, and even their good
works; yea, and all the riches,
honours, and pleasures of the
world; all the things in which
people seek their happiness. For
the excellency of the knowledge
of Christ Jesus my Lord — In
comparison of, and in order that
I may attain, the experimental
and practical knowledge of
Christ, as my Lord, as my
teaching Prophet, my atoning and
mediating Priest, my delivering
and ruling King, reigning in my
heart by his grace, and
governing my life by his laws.
For the apostle evidently had a
respect here to all the offices
and characters of Christ, and
intended what he says to be
understood of sanctification and
practical obedience, as much as
of illumination and
justification. And he accounted
all the things he speaks of as
worthless, not only because they
were ineffectual to procure for
him acceptance with God, but
because in themselves they are
of little value in comparison
with the true knowledge of
Christ, and of the way of
salvation through him; blessings
which the apostle so regarded,
that he despised all other
knowledge, and every human
attainment, as things
comparatively unworthy of his
care, while pursuing his way to
eternal life. For whom I have
actually suffered the loss of
all things — Which the world
esteems, admires, loves, and
delights in. It seems probable,
from this, that he had been
excommunicated by the Jews in
Jerusalem, and spoiled of his
goods: a treatment which some
others, who were not so
obnoxious to the Jews as he was,
met with after they became
Christians, Hebrews 10:33-34.
And I count them but dung — So
far am I from repenting, that I
exposed myself to the loss of
them. The discourse rises. Loss
is sustained with patience; but
dung is cast away with
abhorrence. The Greek word, so
rendered, signifies any vile
refuse of things, the dross of
metals, the dregs of liquors,
the excrements of animals, the
most worthless scraps of meat,
the basest offals, fit only for
dogs: in such a light did the
apostle view every thing that
would engage his dependance for
justification, or stand in
competition with Christ for his
affection. That I may win Christ
— May have him for my Saviour
and Lord; may have an interest
in all the offices that he
sustains, and in all he hath
done and suffered for the
salvation of men, and may be
made partaker of the benefits
which he hath procured for me.
And be found in him —
Vitally united to him by faith
and love; not having mine own
righteousness, which is of the
law — That merely outward
righteousness prescribed by the
law, and performed in my own
strength; but that which is
through the faith of Christ —
That justifying, sanctifying,
and practical righteousness
which is attained through
believing in Christ, and in the
truths and promises of his
gospel. See on Romans 4:6-8;
Ephesians 4:22-24; 1 John 3:7.
The righteousness which is, εκ
θεου, of, or from God — Which is
the gift of his grace and mercy,
and not procured by my merit;
and is from his Spirit, not
effected by my own strength,
through the instrumentality of
faith alone; a faith, however,
productive of love, and of all
holiness and righteousness. The
phrase in the original here, την
εκ θεου δικαιοσυνην, the
righteousness of, or from God,
is used, says Macknight, “I
think only in this passage. It
is opposed to mine own
righteousness, which is from the
law, a phrase found in other
passages, particularly Galatians
3:21. Wherefore, since the
righteousness from the law is
that which is obtained according
to the tenor of the law, the
righteousness from God by faith,
is that which comes from God’s
accounting the believer’s faith
to him for righteousness, and
from his working that faith in
his heart by the influences of
his Spirit.” That I may know him
— In his person and offices, in
his humiliation and exaltation,
his grace and glory, as my
wisdom and righteousness, my
sanctification and redemption;
or, as my complete Saviour; and
the power — δυναμιν, the
efficacy; of his resurrection —
Demonstrating the certain truth
and infinite importance of every
part of his doctrine, the
acceptableness of the atonement
made by him for sin, (see on
Romans 4:25,) opening an
intercourse between earth and
heaven, and obtaining for me the
Holy Spirit, to raise me from
the death of sin unto all the
life of righteousness, (John
16:7,) assuring me of a future
and eternal judgment, (Acts
17:31,) begetting me again to a
lively hope of a heavenly
inheritance, (1 Peter 1:3,) and
raising my affections from
things on earth to things above,
Colossians 3:1-2 : and the
fellowship of his sufferings —
Sympathizing with him in his
sufferings, and partaking of the
benefits purchased for me
thereby; as also being willing
to take up my cross and suffer
with him, as far as I am called
to it, knowing that if I suffer
with him, I shall also be
glorified with him. See the
margin. Being made conformable
to his death — Being dead to the
world and sin, or being made
willing to confirm the gospel by
enduring the tortures of
crucifixion as he did, should it
be his will I should do so. If
by any means — Having attained
an entire conformity to my great
Master, and done and suffered
the whole will of God; I might
attain unto the resurrection of
the dead — Unto that consummate
holiness and blessedness, which
he will bestow upon all his
people when the dead in Christ
shall rise first, and be
distinguished with honour and
glory proportionable to the zeal
and diligence which they have
manifested in his service.
Verse 12
Philippians 3:12. Not as though
I had already attained — ουχ οτι
ηδη ελαβον, literally, not that
I have already received, namely,
the blessings which I am in
pursuit of, even that complete
knowledge of Christ, of the
power of his resurrection, the
fellowship of his sufferings,
and conformity to his death just
mentioned; either were already
perfect — τετελειωμαι,
perfected, completed: or had
finished my course of duty and
sufferings. It appears from
Philippians 3:15, that there is
a difference between one that is
τελειος, perfect, and one that
is perfected; the one is fitted
for the race, the other has
finished the race, and is ready
to receive the prize. But I
follow after — διωκω, I pursue,
what is still before me. The
apostle changes his allusion
from a voyage to a race, which
he continues through the two
next verses. That I may
apprehend that perfect holiness,
that entire conformity to the
will of God, for which also I am
apprehended of Christ Jesus —
Appearing to me in the way to
Damascus, (Acts 26:14,) whose
condescending hand graciously
laid hold on me when I was
proceeding in my mad career of
persecuting him and his
followers, and in the
extraordinary manner of which
you have often heard, brought me
to engage in running that very
different race which I am now
pursuing.
Verse 13-14
Philippians 3:13-14. Brethren, I
count not myself to have
apprehended — To have already
attained those high degrees of
holiness, internal and external,
of usefulness and conformity to
my blessed Master, which I have
in view. But this one thing I do
— I make this my chief business.
Or rather, (which the
phraseology of the original
seems to require,) this one
thing I can say, though I cannot
say that I have attained what I
am aiming at; forgetting those
things which are behind — Even
that part of the race of
Christian experience, duty, and
suffering, which is already run;
and reaching forth, &c. — Greek,
τοις δε εμπροσθεν
επεκτεινομενος, stretching
forward toward those things
which are before — Toward still
higher attainments in grace, and
the further labours and
sufferings which remain to be
accomplished, pursuing these
with the whole vigour of my
soul; I press toward the mark —
Which God hath placed before me,
even a full conformity to the
image of his Son in my heart and
life, Romans 8:29; for the prize
of the high calling of God in
Christ Jesus — The felicity,
honour, and glory, which I am
called of God in Christ to
contend for: a noble prize
indeed! The reader will easily
observe, that there is all along
in this passage a beautiful
allusion to the foot-races in
the Grecian games; and in this
last clause, to that particular
circumstance respecting the
prize, that it was placed in a
very conspicuous situation, in
order that the competitors might
be animated by having it still
in their view. Add to this, that
the judges sat on a high seat,
and from thence, by a herald,
summoned the contenders into the
stadium, or place where they
were to contend. In allusion to
which elevated situation of the
judges, Macknight thinks the
apostle here terms God’s calling
him by Christ to run the
Christian race, ανω κλησις, a
high calling, or a calling from
above. The phrase, however,
seems rather to mean a calling
or invitation to very high
things, even to dignity and
happiness, great beyond all that
we can now conceive. For to
every faithful servant shall it
be granted, partly at death, and
more especially at the day of
final judgment, to enter into
the joy of his Lord, Matthew
25:23; to sit down with him on
his throne, as he overcame and
is set down with his Father on
his throne; and to inherit all
things, even all that God has
and is, Revelation 3:21;
Revelation 21:7. “From the
description which the apostle
gives in this passage of his
stretching all the members of
his body while running the
Christian race, and from his
telling us that he followed on
with unremitting strength and
agility, till he arrived at the
prize which was placed at the
end of the course, we may learn
what earnestness, diligence, and
constancy, in the exercises of
faith and holiness, are
necessary to our faith’s being
counted to us for righteousness
at the last day.”
Verse 15-16
Philippians 3:15-16. Let us, as
many as are perfect — As many as
are genuine believers in Christ,
thorough Christians, justified
and regenerated, new creatures
in Christ, and so fit for the
Christian race of duty and
suffering; be thus minded —
Minded as I have said that I am,
namely, inclined and determined
to press forward with zeal and
diligence to still higher
attainments in holiness,
usefulness, and patient
sufferings, till as Christ was,
they are made in this world. Let
us apply wholly to this one
thing; and if in any thing — In
any of the particulars before
mentioned; ye — Any of you being
yet weak in faith, wavering in
hope, and imperfect in love, see
Hebrews 6:11-12; 1 John 4:17-18;
be otherwise minded — Contented
with, and resting in, past
attainments, and sunk into a
remiss and indolent frame of
mind, destitute of zeal and
Christian fervency; God — If you
be sincere, and truly desire it
of him; shall reveal even this
unto you — Shall show you your
error and your sin, and excite
you to fresh zeal and diligence
in your Christian calling.
Nevertheless — Let us remember
this is on the supposition that,
whereunto we have already
attained — Or, so far forth as
we have already made any
progress toward perfection, we
walk by the same rule — By which
we have hitherto walked, and
take care not to lose the ground
we have already gained, which,
by giving way to unbelief,
diffidence, and distrust of
God’s love, power, and
faithfulness engaged for us, or
by sinking into lukewarmness and
sloth, we should easily do.
Macknight takes the passage in
rather another sense, namely, as
signifying “that such of the
Philippians as sincerely feared
the Lord, if they happened, from
ignorance or prejudice, to think
differently from the apostle
concerning any important article
of faith, would have their error
discovered to them, not by a
particular revelation, but by
the ordinary influences of the
Spirit, agreeably to Psalms
25:12, What man is he who
feareth the Lord, him shall he
teach in the way that he shall
choose.”
Verses 17-19
Philippians 3:17-19. Brethren,
be followers together —
συμμιμηται, joint imitators, of
me — Obedient to my directions,
and following the pattern which
God enables me to set before
you; and mark — Observe and
imitate them; who walk so as ye
have us — Myself and the other
apostles of Christ, for an
ensample. For many — Even
teachers, as they profess
themselves to be, walk in a very
different manner; of whom I have
told you often in time past, and
now tell you even weeping —
While I write, for indeed well
may I weep on so lamentable an
occasion; that they are enemies
of the cross of Christ —
Unwilling to suffer any thing
for him and his cause, and
counteracting the very end and
design of his death. Observe,
reader, such are all cowardly,
all shamefaced, all delicate
Christians. Whose end is
destruction — This is placed in
the front, that what follows may
be read with the greater horror;
whose God is their belly — Whose
supreme happiness lies in
gratifying their sensual
appetites. The apostle gives the
same character of the Judaizing
teachers, (Romans 16:18; Titus
1:11,) and, therefore, it is
probable that he is speaking
here chiefly of them and of
their disciples. Whose glory is
in their shame — In those things
which they ought to be ashamed
of: and whoever glories in the
commission of any sin, or in the
omission of any duty which he
owes to God, his neighbour, or
himself; or in the gratification
of those inclinations and
dispositions that are contrary
to the love of God and his
neighbour; or in that manner of
employing his money, his
knowledge, his authority over
others, or his time, which is
contrary to the will of God, and
manifests that he is not a
faithful steward of God’s
manifold gifts, glories in his
shame: who mind — Relish,
desire, seek, pursue; earthly
things — Things visible and
temporal, in preference to those
which are invisible and eternal;
for to be carnally minded is
death, Romans 8:6.
Verse 20-21
Philippians 3:20-21. For our
conversation is in heaven — We
that are true Christians are of
a very different spirit, and act
in a quite different manner. The
original expression, πολιτευμα,
rendered conversation, is a word
of a very extensive meaning,
implying our citizenship, our
thoughts, our affections, are
already in heaven; or we think,
speak, and act, converse with
our fellow-creatures, and
conduct ourselves in all our
intercourse with them, as
citizens of the New Jerusalem,
and as being only strangers and
pilgrims upon earth. We
therefore endeavour to promote
the interests of that glorious
society to which we belong, to
learn its manners, secure a
title to its privileges, and
behave in a way suitable to, and
worthy of our relation to it;
from whence also we look for the
Saviour — To come and carry us
thither according to his
promise, (John 14:3,) namely,
our spirits, at the dissolution
of this earthly tabernacle; yea,
and afterward to transform our
vile body, το σωμα της
ταπεινωσεως, the body of our
humiliation; which, in
consequence of the fall of our
first parents, sinks us so low,
is subject to, and encompassed
with, so many infirmities, is
such a clog to our souls, and so
greatly hinders our progress in
the work of faith and labour of
love: this body we expect he
will transform into the most
perfect state and the most
beauteous form, when it will be
purer than the unspotted
firmament, brighter than the
lustre of the stars, and, which
exceeds all parallel, which
comprehends all perfection, like
unto his glorious body — Of
which an image was given in his
transfiguration, yea like that
wonderfully glorious body which
he wears in his heavenly
kingdom, and on his triumphant
throne. So that here, as Romans
8:23, the redemption of the body
from corruption, by a glorious
resurrection, is represented as
the especial privilege of the
righteous. According to that
mighty working — That energy of
power; whereby he is able to
subdue all things unto himself —
To show himself to the whole
intelligent creation of God
completely victorious over all
his enemies, even over death and
the grave, the last of them. |