PHILIPPIANS
Chapter 2
Phil | Weymouth | 2:1 | If then I can appeal to you as the followers of Christ, if there is any persuasive power in love and any common sharing of the Spirit, or if you have any tender-heartedness and compassion, make my joy complete by being of one mind, | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:2 | united by mutual love, with harmony of feeling giving your minds to one and the same object. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:3 | Do nothing in a spirit of factiousness or of vainglory, but, with true humility, let every one regard the rest as being of more account than himself; | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:4 | each fixing his attention, not simply on his own interests, but on those of others also. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:6 | Although from the beginning He had the nature of God He did not reckon His equality with God a treasure to be tightly grasped. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:7 | Nay, He stripped Himself of His glory, and took on Him the nature of a bondservant by becoming a man like other men. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:8 | And being recognized as truly human, He humbled Himself and even stooped to die; yes, to die on a cross. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:9 | It is in consequence of this that God has also so highly exalted Him, and has conferred on Him the Name which is supreme above every other, | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:10 | in order that in the Name of JESUS every knee should bow, of beings in Heaven, of those on the earth, and of those in the underworld, | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:11 | and that every tongue should confess that JESUS CHRIST is LORD, to the glory of God the Father. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:12 | Therefore, my dearly-loved friends, as I have always found you obedient, labour earnestly with fear and trembling--not merely as though I were present with you, but much more now since I am absent from you--labour earnestly, I say, to make sure of your own salvation. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:13 | For it is God Himself whose power creates within you the desire to do His gracious will and also brings about the accomplishment of the desire. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:15 | so that you may always prove yourselves to be blameless and spotless--irreproachable children of God in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation, among whom you are seen as heavenly lights in the world, | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:16 | holding out to them a Message of Life. It will then be my glory on the day of Christ that I did not run my race in vain nor toil in vain. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:17 | Nay, even if my life is to be poured as a libation upon the sacrificial offering of your faith, I rejoice, and I congratulate you all. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:19 | But, if the Lord permits it, I hope before long to send Timothy to you, that I, in turn, may be cheered by getting news of you. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:21 | Everybody concerns himself about his own interests, not about those of Jesus Christ. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:22 | But you know Timothy's approved worth--how, like a child working with his father, he has served with me in furtherance of the Good News. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:24 | but trusting, as I do, in the Lord, I believe that I shall myself also come to you before long. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:25 | Yet I deem it important to send Epaphroditus to you now--he is my brother and comrade both in labour and in arms, and is your messenger who has ministered to my needs. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:26 | I send him because he is longing to see you all and is distressed at your having heard of his illness. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:27 | For it is true that he has been ill, and was apparently at the point of death; but God had pity on him, and not only on him, but also on me, to save me from having sorrow upon sorrow. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:28 | I am therefore all the more eager to send him, in the hope that when you see him again you may be glad and I may have the less sorrow. | |
Phil | Weymouth | 2:29 | Receive him therefore with heartfelt Christian joy, and hold in honour men like him; | |