Philippians: Joy in Christ Against All Odds
Paul's letter to the Philippians stands as one of the most personally warm and theologically rich of all his correspondence. Written from prison — most likely Rome, during the captivity described at the end of Acts — the letter addresses a congregation Paul loved deeply, a church he had founded on his second missionary journey when Lydia and her household became the first European converts to the gospel (Acts 16). The Philippians had supported Paul financially and emotionally throughout his ministry in a way no other church had, and this letter is, in large measure, his heartfelt response to their latest gift, delivered by their messenger, Epaphroditus . What is most striking about Philippians is its dominant mood. For a letter written by a man in chains, facing a trial whose outcome could mean his execution, the tone is relentlessly joyful. The word joy and its cognates appear no fewer than sixt...