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...but one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and reaching forward to what lies ahead I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus. (Philippians 3:13-14 NASB)
In this passage the Apostle Paul utilizes the metaphor of a runner in a race to illustrate the Christian’s pursuit of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus. We might identify the prize as the Crown of Glory (1 Peter 5:4), the Crown of Life (Revelation 2:10), the Incorruptible Crown (1 Corinthians 9:25), or heaven itself. The truth is, Paul does not identify the specific prize in this passage.
It is important to understand that the prize mentioned here is not salvation. In verse 12, Paul says, I press on so that I may lay hold of that for which also I was laid hold of by Christ Jesus. He has already been laid hold of by Christ; the matter of salvation is settled. Paul is not challenging his readers work to obtain salvation, but rather to work in response to the salvation they already possess in Christ.
So, what is the believer to work for? The focus of our work is the goal, or as the KJV says ‘the mark of the prize.” So, what is the goal of the believer? The goal of the believer is to be conformed to the image of the Lord Jesus, to be found complete in Him.
Alexander MacLaren, a Scottish-born pastor and theologian of the late 1800’s, wrote this about the goal of God-like and God-pleasing character in our lives:
For this we were created; for this we have been redeemed. For this Jesus Christ lived and suffered and died. For this God’s Spirit is poured out upon the world. All else is scaffolding; this is the building which it contemplates, and when the building is reared the scaffolding may be cleared away. God means to make us like Himself, and so pleasing to Himself, and has no other end in all the varieties of His gifts and bestowments but only this, the production of character.
As believers, all that we encounter in our lives is utilized by God to develop in us Christ-like character. If you’ve held a Polaroid picture or developed film in a dark room, you know the anticipation of watching the image come into view on the paper; you know it takes time for the image to be fully developed. The same is true of the process of sanctification in our lives.
How is His image developing in your life?
By Jesse Smith
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