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PROFILE OF A PARISHIONER
Philippians 2:25-30 [1]
How much do you know about Epaphroditus?
What does his name mean? Let's
look at his name: Epa-phroditus. It
is very close to "Aphrodite", isn't it.
It was meant to be close. The
man's parents gave him a name which was the masculine equivalent of the feminine
name of the pagan goddess. The
parents belonged to the cult which burgeoned around her.
In the ancient world Aphrodite represented deified sex.
The cult around her -- the world has never been without those who deify
sex -- gathered up the devotees. These
sex-worshippers had built a temple which perched on a hill, 1800 feet above the
city of
Epaphroditus came from a home sunk in such sordidness.
Yet his parents had thought so highly of it all that they had named their
son after it. They had pointed their
son toward the lifestyle that they pursued themselves.
But then it happened: the miracle of grace -- deliverance -- as the
gospel was declared and Epaphroditus heard with ear and heart.
A Christian now, with a life-style that repudiated everything his
foolish, sin-blinded parents had thought desirable for him, he found himself a
parishioner in the congregation of
When the apostle Paul, the much-loved, much-esteemed friend of the
Epaphroditus was exceedingly brave. He
was, after all, friend and personal attendant to a notorious fellow who was
awaiting trial on a capital offence. Eddie
Greenspan wasn't on hand to defend the apostle, and therefore when the full
weight of the
Then Epaphroditus fell ill; so sick that he was regarded as good as dead.
As he struggled back to health Paul thought the younger man should return
to his home congregation in
Now while the Christian fellowship in [2(i)]
Brother. The Greek word for
"brother", adelphos, literally means "from the same womb".
Brothers (sisters) come from the same womb, the same source, the same
origin. "Think as highly of
Epaphroditus as you think of me", Paul wrote the congregation,
"because he and I are possessed of the same spiritual genes".
When people became Christians in the first century often their families
turned on them and disowned them. The
day Epaphroditus embraced Jesus Christ in faith his family wrote him off as a
religious extremist who was disloyal to the family and its traditions.
Throughout our Lord's earthly ministry his family had not understood him
either. One day they came to take him home, hoping to end the embarrassment he
was causing the family. "Your mother and your siblings are waiting outside
for you", he was told as he spoke. "My
mother?", Jesus had said, "my brothers? my sisters?
Who are they? Here is my
family. Whoever hears me and heeds
me; whoever does the will of God is my brother, my sister, my mother".
Mark cherished this incident and included it in his written gospel just
because he wanted to lend comfort to the readers of his gospel, thirty years
later, who had been disowned by their families the day they announced their love
of Jesus and their loyalty to him. These
people had found a new family, a greater family, in the fellowship of Christians
who now clung in faith to the elder brother of them all.
Epaphroditus was brother to Paul as Paul was brother to him. The bond
that bound them together was stronger than any other tie anywhere else in life.
Furthermore, the last thing Paul, the most widely-known of the apostles,
wanted to do was suggest that because Epaphroditus had conveyed Paul's letter to
Philippi Epaphroditus was a mere errand-boy, mere flunkie, mere mule.
He is brother to the apostle, from the same spiritual womb because born
of the same Spirit of God. "Be
sure to look upon him as you look upon me", Paul says to those who might be
prone to look upon Epaphroditus as inferior.
Brother. My friend Reginald
Miller, now retired in Chatham, N.B.; Miller spent six years as a common sailor
on a British warship in World War II. You
have to know the traditions of the Royal Navy to appreciate the unbreakable,
unbendable line that divides officers from sailors.
Yet there was one exception, Miller used to tell me; the exception was
the fellowship of shipboard Christians -- officers and sailors -- when they were
ashore. Naval rank meant nothing as
iron fast traditions melted before the warmth of the gospel.
In the days of the early church slaves were slaves while free persons
were free. There was nothing a
microscopic church could do to overturn the empire's legislation.
But within the Christian fellowship slaves frequently taught free people
the rudiments of the gospel-faith and encouraged them in it.
The highest wall, the insurmountable wall above all walls, was the wall
between Jewish people and everyone else. Yet
even this wall, Paul states in his letter to the congregation in [2(ii)]
Fellow-worker. What kind of
fellow-worker? Fellow-tentmaker?
(Paul, we know earned his living as a tentmaker.)
No. We don't know what
Epaphroditus did for a living. When
Paul speaks of Epaphroditus as "fellow-worker" he is thinking of work
as Jesus had used the word when he said, "My father is working still, and I
am working." Here our Lord
means that energy, passion, activity which magnify the
This is not to say that the ministry of Epaphroditus was identical in all
respects to that of Paul. Paul
always wanted to announce the gospel where it had never been heard before.
There is no evidence that Epaphroditus thought this to be his calling.
We don't know what the young man did in his kingdom-work.
He would certainly have prayed. He
may have been like Barnabas, whose name, "Son of Comfort", tells us
what he was about. Perhaps he had
unusual discernment as to what God's plans were for this person or that or for
one of the five house-churches in
Every last person in any congregation has a unique ministry.
Theirs isn't mine and mine isn't theirs, but theirs and mine have the
same weight and are essential to each other.
One Sunday morning, a few years ago, an ordinary Sunday morning when I
was expecting nothing extraordinary, two things happened to me that I shall
never forget. Following the service
a woman older than I, a relative newcomer to the congregation, looked me in the
eye with that look which renders two people so transparent to each other that
they have X-ray vision into each other's heart.
She said a few simple words which, like most simple words, were
incalculably weighty: "Victor, I prayed for you this morning; I pray for
you every day". Fellow-worker!
Minutes later a woman whose love for our Lord makes mine look anaemic
spoke to me at coffee-hour. She
handed me an envelope and said, "Put this toward your next book."
Unknown to her only that week I had agreed to enter a joint publishing
venture in reprinting my book of devotions, Ponder And Pray.
Her gift was a substantial contribution toward the cost of reprinting the
book. For in the envelope were five
$100-bills. Fellow-worker. [2(iii)]
Fellow-soldier. Soldiering
implies conflict. The gospel
invariably collides with a fallen world. Jesus
was immersed in conflict every day. When
John Wesley was a spiritually inert clergyman he knew no conflict.
Once his heart was "strangely warmed" (24th May, 1738) and he
quietly apprehended the truth of the gospel he was knee-deep in conflict for the
next fifty-three years of his life: conflict with bishops, with magistrates,
with mobs, with lazy ministers, with theological opponents, with distillers,
with bankers who wouldn't lend his people money for small business start-up.
The kingdom of God collides with the very world it is meant to redeem.
The only way the Christian can avoid conflict is to cease to be a
Christian. Surely no one here
prefers Judas to Jesus!
It's plain that to be a fellow-worker is always to be a fellow-soldier,
since kingdom-work will always entail kingdom-conflict.
And like soldiering anywhere, kingdom-soldiering entails not only
conflict but hardship, suffering, even sacrifice.
Think for a minute of the horrors of the twentieth century, just
concluded, beginning with the slaughter of the Armenians in the second decade,
the executions of Lenin and Stalin, and so on right up to the ethnic cleansing
in Croatia and the rape of 20,000 women. These
conflicts that are frighteningly visible -- conflicts of class, nation, race,
economics, culture -- are but a partial manifestation of invisible spiritual
conflict that seethes ceaselessly and courses ubiquitously.
And then lest we distance ourselves cavalierly from all this we should
recall the word of Solzhenitsyn, Russian thinker and writer: the spiritual
conflict that bedevils nations finally passes through every last individual
human heart.
A world whose distinguishing feature is conflict does not welcome the
gospel. When the gospel is held up those who hold it up are immersed in conflict
immediately. What do they do next?
Capitulate? Compromise?
Deny him whose gospel it is? Or
do they take their share of the hardship, suffering and sacrifice that are the
lot of any soldier, as Paul reminded another young man, Timothy?
Paul commended Epaphroditus to the Philippian congregation as his
"fellow-soldier". Epaphroditus
was anything but a shirker. [2(iv)]
Lastly the apostle insists that Epaphroditus has been a "minister to
my need". What was Paul's
particular neediness that the younger man met?
We are not told. Perhaps he
brought Paul food that was better than the wretched stuff fed to prisoners on
death row. Unquestionably
Epaphroditus met Paul's need for companionship, alleviated his loneliness,
brought news of the triumph of the gospel as the gospel flooded more widely
among unbelievers and penetrated more deeply within believers.
I think too that one reason Paul doesn't tell us what his particular need
is is that he doesn't want us to know. We
each have that need which we do not advertise not because we are ashamed of it
but because it is so private, so personal, so deep in us, so close to our heart
that only our soul-mates can meet it and therefore only our soul-mates are
permitted to see it. I know whereof
I speak. And in the providence of
God I have been given those who know me so intimately and love me so dearly that
they meet that need which others do not know of and never will.
Paul didn't tell the Philippian congregation that every last Christian in
Rome ministered to his need; he said that Epaphroditus did.
You and I are ministers to the need of fellow-Christians.
Then every day we must thank God for those who give us privileged access
to them, even as we thank God for those whom we give privileged access to us.
[3]
Paul rejoiced in the person Epaphroditus had become by the grace of God.
No longer in the orbit of Aphrodite and all that the goddess-cult
represented, Epaphroditus knew a new lord and cherished a new lifestyle.
Paul loved the younger man and wanted to make sure that the congregation
in Philippi kept on loving him too. "Brother, fellow-worker,
fellow-soldier, minister to my need." What
is this but a description of our sisters and brothers in Christ?
Which is to say, the profile of a parishioner in Rome or Philippi or King
Township, the profile of a parishioner anywhere, that man or woman you and I
have been called to serve in the name of Jesus Christ.
Victor
Shepherd
April 2003
Philippians 2:25-30 |