Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Christlikeness


Recently, I received an email addressed ‘Dear Christ’. It was obvious that the writer had meant to have put ‘Dear Chris’: thanks, nonetheless, for the compliment! However, it made me give some thought to the issue of Christ likeness. During this part of the year we are being treated to St Paul’s wonderful letter to the Philippians. It is often regarded as Paul’s most positive letter, and is filled with ‘joy, friendship and thanksgiving’[1]. It is an encouraging letter, but only if we grasp Paul’s central point that we endeavour to have ‘the same mind in us that was in Christ Jesus’ (Philippians 2: 5). Philippians chapter 2, and the hymn that is contained within it (Vv 6 – 11), is regarding as being at the very centre of Paul’s theology; certainly at the heart of the letter to the Philippians.  The hymn speaks of Jesus’ humility and his reversion of status: ‘who though he was in the form of God, did not regard equality with God as something to be exploited, but emptied himself, taking the form of a slave...’ (Philippians 2: 6 -7).

Humility is something that if you say you have it, you obviously don’t. In Jesus we find the true model of humility. Biblical scholar, Michael Gorman, calls this Cruciformity: a wonderful word whereby Christians are shaped by the cross of Jesus into Christ like humility. Humility is something that shapes us, rather than something we shape. Paul begins chapter 2 by encouraging the Philippians ‘in humility to regard others better than yourselves. Let each of you look not to your own interests, but to the interests of others’ (Philippians 2: 3 – 4). This perception of others we might call a circle of deference: humility encircles and permeates the Christian community creating a people shaped by cruciform love. So often we all look to increase our status or try to have ‘one up’ on someone else, but Paul reminds us that this is not the way of Christ, and it is not the way of Christ likeness.




[1] Gorman, M 2004, Apostle of the crucified Lord: a theological introduction to Paul and his letters, (Eerdmans, Grand Rapids/Cambridge) P. 412.

4 comments:

Stephan Clark said...

It would be perfectly humble to say you were humble, if you were humble

Chris said...

And then perhaps, Stephen, it would betray your lack of humility in acknowledging your own humility.

Daka said...

I wonder about the humility - humus - earth - adamah connection. We lose connection to the earth and our "ground of being" and things go to shit.

Chris said...

Hi Daka. This grounding is important, and I think the humility we speak of is very much about being grounded. The Philippians' hymn makes the connection between Christ's humanness and his obedience in contrast to Adam's disobedience and exploitation of his status. This earthiness/groundedness is part of the expression of our obedience. God leads us to be more human, not less.