Christ and Faith
Philippians 3:9
And be found in him, not having my own righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the faith of Christ…


History and our own personal life has no more strange and pathetic page than is suggested by the words, "I have suffered the loss of all things."

1. We are started on an infinite journey; and no surer witness to this exists than in the easy and familiar way in which we let object after object fall from our lives in our pursuit of what seems to be greater. Or like a general who leaves the stronghold he is defending, deserting cannon and baggage and the unfinished toil of months because the tide of battle has set elsewhere and all his force must be concentrated there, so are we in the great battle of life.

2. The same thing is true in higher regions. We cannot rest in intellectual attainment. We climb where thought is giddy; and at last, here is law. Where is God? Without that discovery know ledge is dross, and we can suffer the loss of it if we can but reach Him and be right with Him.

I. THE FAILURE OF LEGAL RIGHTEOUSNESS TO BEING US PEACE. Through such a process as that to which we have referred the apostle had passed in the urgent march of his spirit to its home in the heart of Christ. There is a tone almost of solemn mocking in the appeal he makes to the past. "My Saviour did not find me among the offscourings of the world. He did not pick me from the mire. If any man had a right to boast I had." But it all led him to the "O wretched man that I am," etc. This law, under the mountain shadow of which we have been standing, brought him, brings us, no peace. All that it can do is to open the doors of the temple, which by faith we must enter if we would behold God.

II. THE HEART'S CRY FOR A RIGHTEOUSNESS OF GOD.

1. There is a condition where no such cry is heard — the Pharisaical. A man may go on looking at the outward so long, and so succeed in stifling his spiritual aspirations as to arrive at the conclusion that all he can do is to obey the letter of the law.

2. But a man who has found out that even strict obedience to the moral law cannot reveal God will understand this cry. The highest commands that law ever laid, and the lowliest obedience ever rendered, have no Divine significance but in the revelation of an Infinite Person, to whom we stand personally related. We ask to be clothed with Himself.

III. THE RIGHTEOUSNESS THAT IS REVEALED TO FAITH. To the apostle the voice of faith that is in Christ was a sufficient answer to this cry. "Not having mine own righteousness." The Incarnation was the only possible answer for God to give and for us to receive. The law was a schoolmaster to bring us to Christ that we might receive Himself. This is enough, and in Christ we have the righteousness of God.

(L. Mann.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: And be found in him, not having mine own righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith:

WEB: and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own, that which is of the law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness which is from God by faith;




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