Learning From Lives That Point to Christ – Deep Roots, Part 6

Philippians 4:1-9

We end this six-part miniseries on Philippians 4:1-9, with one final piece of practical encouragement. The Apostle Paul turns our attention to something deeply practical: follow worthy examples. The believers in Philippi had learned from Paul, not just through his teaching but through his life. What kind of life was he living? Not one of self-promotion or comfort. He writes from prison, not to complain, but to rejoice: “What has happened to me has really served to advance the gospel” (Philippians 1:12). His concern isn’t his own safety; it’s that others might hear and grow in grace.

We need examples like this. People whose lives, like Paul’s, show us what it means to seek and follow Christ. Not perfect people, but faithful ones. If you don’t have someone like that in your life, ask the Lord to lead you to a mentor, a believer who has traveled a little further down the road than you. Their successes will inspire you, and their failures will teach you. The Christian life is not meant to be walked alone.

This passage, began with, “stand firm thus in the Lord.” Not in your own strength, not in your circumstances, but in the Lord’s perfect purposes for His beloved.

Years ago, when my wife and I lived on the rocky coast of Gloucester, Massachusetts, we often visited Halibut Point State Park. Large granite boulders stood against the crashing waves. Sometimes the waves rose so high they swallowed the rocks from view. If you didn’t know better, you’d think those waves could shatter them. But they never did. Generation after generation, those rocks endured.

We live in a time when the waves feel overwhelming. Markets shake. Nations tremble. Families fracture. Yet, there is a foundation that cannot be moved. Do you have a rock to stand on, one that won’t crumble under the crashing waves? If you do, are you standing on it? Stand firm in the Lord.

What will this look like in practice? Fractured relationships will mend, joy in the Lord will be evident even when circumstances seem dire, thoughts will be caught up in what’s worthy of our head space, and Christ-like examples will guide us.

Lead by the Example (1 Peter 5:1-4)

1 Peter 5:1-4

Stephen Covey’s The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People remains one of the most influential leadership books in recent times. Though things have changed somewhat since he published it in 1989, his conclusions regarding leadership trends in America continue to carry weight. Covey concluded that the prior 50-years of American leadership literature was primarily concerned with superficial, quick fixes. However, the unanimous trend in American leadership literature during the first 150-years of our nation’s history was primarily on character ethics. 

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A shepherd leads eagerly not greedily (1 Peter 5:1-4)

1 Peter 5:1-4

Francis Collins, the Director of the National Institute of Health, gave the commencement address at Southern Methodist University a few years ago. In that address, he mentioned the difference between what political commentator David Brooks calls resume virtues and eulogy virtues. Resume virtues are the things you put on a job application, resume, or CV. Eulogy virtues are the things people will say about you when your work on earth ends. Resume virtues tell the things you did to advance yourself, your position, and your finances. Eulogy virtues tell not only how you handled your successes but also your failures, not only how you treated your peers and coworkers, but how you treated your spouse and children. Collins asked a question to those graduates that we ought to ask ourselves, “Are you spending your time on resume virtues or are you spending your time on eulogy virtues?”

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Shepherd Leaders are Willing to Lead (1 Peter 5:1-4)

1 Peter 5:1-4

In out last blog we compared the leadership style of a shepherd to that of a wolf. A shepherd puts the interest of the flock before his or her own. The wolf ravages the flock and leads for their own advantage rather than the care of the flock. If the leadership style of a wolf can be marked by vices such as sloth, greed, and power, the leadership style of a shepherd offers a cure for each of these maladies in the form of a virtue. Let us first look at sloth.

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Lead as a shepherd not as a wolf (1 Peter 5:1-4)

1 Peter 5:1-4

There has never been a greater need for upright leaders in our country than now. It ought not surprise us that the greatest lessons in leadership come not from the latest leadership books but from the Bible. Harvard, Princeton, and Yale were originally founded as training centers to produce godly, Christian leaders. They took their lead from the Good Book.

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