Saints and Servants: The Church's Identity in Christ
Christian identity begins with belonging to Christ and living under His grace.
A teaching guide through Philippians, shaped by biblical, Christ-centered, and cross-centered reading.
A teaching guide through Philippians, shaped by biblical, Christ-centered, and cross-centered reading.
Teaching paths help you move through the book with a clear purpose. Use the right rail to focus the chapter plan, or stay in the full book view to read every passage in canonical order.
Best for: church-wide formation, annual series, big-picture discipleship.
Each week can point to Study, and some weeks also link to an outline when one is available.
Philippians 1 argues that the gospel creates a partnership deeper than circumstance, that God faithfully completes what He begins in His people, that suffering may serve rather than hinder gospel advance, and that the church must publicly embody the gospel with unity, courage, and perseverance.
Christian identity begins with belonging to Christ and living under His grace.
Christian fellowship is active gospel participation sustained by God’s faithful completion of His saving work.
Christian love must grow in knowledge and discernment so that believers live pure, fruitful lives through Christ.
Christ is proclaimed and the gospel progresses even through adversity and mixed motives.
When Christ is central, death becomes gain and life becomes fruitful service.
Heavenly citizenship is displayed through unified courage and faithful suffering for Christ.
Philippians 2 argues that gospel unity must be rooted in shared life in Christ, expressed through humility, grounded in the self-humbling and exaltation of Christ, worked out through obedient sanctification by God’s inward power, displayed before the world through non-grumbling witness, and embodied in servants like Timothy and Epaphroditus.
Shared life in Christ produces selfless humility that protects unity.
The path of humble obedience leads to exaltation because Christ Himself walked it first.
Because God works in His people, they must live obediently and shine as lights in a dark world.
Faithful servants seek Christ’s interests above their own and prove themselves through consistent obedience.
Faithful gospel workers may suffer greatly, and the church must honor their sacrificial commitment.
Philippians 3 argues that true Christian confidence rests entirely in Christ, not in fleshly privilege, religious achievement, law-based righteousness, earthly appetite, or civic status. The believer's life is now defined by gaining Christ, receiving righteousness from God through faith, knowing Christ in resurrection power and suffering fellowship, pressing toward final resurrection, imitating faithful examples, rejecting cross-denying patterns, and awaiting bodily transformation from the returning Lord.
Authentic worship belongs to those who boast in Christ and reject confidence in religious credentials.
Everything once counted as gain must be considered loss in order to gain Christ.
Spiritual maturity is marked by persistent forward pursuit rooted in Christ’s saving initiative.
Those who belong to Christ stand firm now because they await His transforming return.
Philippians 4 argues that heavenly citizenship and Christ-centered hope must become visible in the church’s relational unity, emotional steadiness, prayerful dependence, disciplined thought, practiced obedience, learned contentment, sacrificial generosity, and confidence in God’s provision.
Gospel partners must seek reconciliation because they share redemption in Christ.
Believers overcome anxiety through rejoicing trust and prayerful dependence in Christ.
What believers dwell upon and practice determines whether they walk in the peace of God’s presence.
Believers find sufficiency in Christ and trust God to supply their needs according to His glory.