Jeff Ragan’s Reviews > Paul's Letter to the Philippians (New International Commentary on the New Testament > Status Update
Jeff Ragan
is on page 337 of 543
"While believers' sufferings do not have the expiatory significance of Christ's, they are nonetheless seen as intimately related to his. Through our suffering the significance of Christ's suffering is manifested to the world, which is why in 1:29-30 Paul describes such suffering as 'on behalf of Christ'...it is difficult to imagine that Paul is not here reflecting the teaching of his Lord..."(332-3).
— Apr 27, 2025 08:45AM
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Jeff’s Previous Updates
Jeff Ragan
is on page 462 of 543
"...in Paul's hand conventions are never merely conventional. Eventually everything...is brought under the influence of Christ...To live is Christ; to die is to gain Christ; & for the sake of such 'gain'...all else is merely refuse. Thus, may the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with all the readers of this letter, & with those who use this commentary to help better understand it as the Word of Christ" (462),
— Jul 14, 2025 12:16PM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 449 of 543
"The uniqueness of this passage in the corpus comes into focus here. For in Philippi he did accept their material support once and again. This says something significant about his relationship with this church, and here it is hard not to see the hand of Luke (and Lydia?) at work. Thus he gladly acknowledges their gift, but even here one finds the demurrer" (448).
— Jul 08, 2025 10:58AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 436 of 543
"Just as with 'being humbled' in v. 12, so 'everything' in this sentence should be understood more broadly as well, as long as it is understood within Paul's theological frame of reference...his singular focus on Christ,..already dictates what 'all things' means for him. To take this sentence out of that singular Christ-focused context of his life is to doom it to serve for lesser, more often selfish, things" (434).
— Jun 30, 2025 11:10AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 422 of 543
"The most common response to such a culture is not discrimination, but rejection. This text suggests a better way, that one approach the marketplace, the arts, the media, the university, looking for what is 'true' and 'uplifting' and 'admirable'; but that one do so with a discriminating eye and heart, for which the Crucified One serves as the template" (421).
— Jun 23, 2025 09:45AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 413 of 543
"Thanksgiving is an explicit acknowledgment of creatureliness and dependence, a recognition that everything comes as gift, the verbalization before God of his goodness and generosity. If prayer as petition indicates their utter dependence on and trust in God, petition 'accompanied by thanksgiving' puts both their prayer and their lives into proper theological perspective" (409).
— Jun 16, 2025 10:27AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 406 of 543
"'Joy,' unmitigated, untrammeled joy, is - or at least should be - the distinctive mark of the believer in Christ Jesus. The wearing of black and the long face, which so often came to typify some later expressions of Christian piety, are totally foreign to the Pauline version; Paul the theologian of grace is equally the theologian of joy" (404).
— Jun 09, 2025 01:19PM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 398 of 543
"The gospel is...always at stake in our world, & the call to God's people, whose 'names are written in the book of life,' is to live that life now in whatever 'Philippi' & in the face of whatever opposition it is found. But to do so effectively, its people, especially those in leadership, must learn to subordinate personal agendas to the larger agenda of the gospel, 'to have the same mindset in the Lord..." (397-8).
— Jun 04, 2025 11:00AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 385 of 543
"Although Paul's language will not quite allow the translation, 'we are a colony of heaven'...the point of the imagery comes very close to that. Just as Philippi was a colony of Rome, whose citizens thereby exemplified the life of Rome in the province of Macedonia, so the citizens of the 'heavenly commonwealth' were to function as a colony of heaven in that outpost of Rome" (379).
— May 24, 2025 08:32AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 375 of 543
"...this passage helps to tie together several items in the letter , especially the theme of joy in suffering and Paul's reasons for the narratives about Christ (2:6-11) and himself (3:4-14). At issue throughout is living a cruciform existence, discipleship marked by the cross and evidenced by suffering on behalf of Christ" (363).
— May 18, 2025 01:58PM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 362 of 543
"Here is the offer of friendship; they may freely disagree with him at points - on many matters - and if any matter counts for something, Paul trusts God to bring them up to speed here as well. What both the immediate and larger contexts of this letter...disallows is that 'something differently' can refer either to their living a cruciform lifestyle or to the vigorous pursuit of the heavenly prize" (359).
— May 07, 2025 08:27AM

