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Text: Philippians 2
Preaching: Rev. Dr. Stephen M. Fearing
We spend so much of our lives trying to get to the top and we’re taught to call that “success.” More followers, more money, more influence, more control. But Philippians 2 confronts that story head-on, not with shame or scolding, but with a song. We walk through Paul’s sharp pivot from tender encouragement to a clear exhortation: don’t chase selfish ambition, don’t treat people like obstacles, and don’t let the church absorb the world’s obsession with status.
At the center is the Christ hymn, one of the earliest summaries of Christian belief and a blueprint for Christian character. Jesus does not exploit power or cling to rank. He empties himself, takes the form of a servant, and goes all the way down into costly love. That vision challenges the loud, distorted versions of Jesus that trade humility for dominance and turn faith into spectacle, grievance, or control. The Jesus we meet here serves rather than shows off, invites rather than imposes, and cares less about public performance than about neighbors being fed, safe, and loved.
Paul also makes it practical by pointing to Timothy and Epaphroditus as flesh-and-blood examples of the mind of Christ: genuine concern, ordinary faithfulness, and self-giving service without a craving for recognition. If you’re tired of the ladder, this is a different way to live and a different way to be church. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us: where are you feeling called to take the way down?
Follow us on Instagram @guilfordparkpresbyterianchurch
Follow us on Facebook @guilfordparkpc
Follow us on TikTok @guilfordparkpreschurch
Website: www.guilfordpark.org
By Rev. Dr. Stephen M. FearingSend us Fan Mail
Text: Philippians 2
Preaching: Rev. Dr. Stephen M. Fearing
We spend so much of our lives trying to get to the top and we’re taught to call that “success.” More followers, more money, more influence, more control. But Philippians 2 confronts that story head-on, not with shame or scolding, but with a song. We walk through Paul’s sharp pivot from tender encouragement to a clear exhortation: don’t chase selfish ambition, don’t treat people like obstacles, and don’t let the church absorb the world’s obsession with status.
At the center is the Christ hymn, one of the earliest summaries of Christian belief and a blueprint for Christian character. Jesus does not exploit power or cling to rank. He empties himself, takes the form of a servant, and goes all the way down into costly love. That vision challenges the loud, distorted versions of Jesus that trade humility for dominance and turn faith into spectacle, grievance, or control. The Jesus we meet here serves rather than shows off, invites rather than imposes, and cares less about public performance than about neighbors being fed, safe, and loved.
Paul also makes it practical by pointing to Timothy and Epaphroditus as flesh-and-blood examples of the mind of Christ: genuine concern, ordinary faithfulness, and self-giving service without a craving for recognition. If you’re tired of the ladder, this is a different way to live and a different way to be church. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us: where are you feeling called to take the way down?
Follow us on Instagram @guilfordparkpresbyterianchurch
Follow us on Facebook @guilfordparkpc
Follow us on TikTok @guilfordparkpreschurch
Website: www.guilfordpark.org