The Fellowship of the Cross

Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus.
—Philippians 2:5

Paul told us here of the mind that was in Christ: He emptied Himself; He took the form of a servant; He humbled Him­self, “even [to] the death of the cross” (verse 8). It is this mind that was in Christ—the deep humility that gave up His life to the very death—that is to be the spirit that animates us. In this way, we will prove and enjoy the blessed fellowship of His cross.

Paul had said to the Philippians, “If there be therefore any consolation in Christ” (verse 1)—the Comforter had come to reveal His real presence in them—“if any fellowship of the Spirit” (verse 1)—it was in this power of the Spirit that they were to breathe the Spirit of the crucified Christ and manifest His disposition in the fellowship of the cross in their lives.

As they strove to do this, they would feel the need of a deeper insight into their real oneness with Christ. They would learn to appreciate the truth that they had been crucified with Christ, that their “old man” (Romans 6:6) had been crucified, and that they had died to sin in Christ’s death and were now living to God in His life. They would learn to know what it meant that the crucified Christ lived in them, and that they had “crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts” (Galatians 5:24). Because the crucified Jesus lived in them, they could live crucified to the world.

And so they would gradually enter more deeply into the meaning and power of their high calling to live as those who were dead to sin, the world, and self. Each in his own measure would bear the marks of the cross, with its sentence of death on the flesh, with its hating of the self-life and its entire denial of self, and with its growing conformity to the crucified Redeemer in His deep humility and entire surrender of His will to the life of God.

This is a difficult thing to learn; there is no quick lesson in this school of the cross. But the personal experience of the fellowship of the cross will lead to a deeper understanding and a higher appreciation of the redemption of the cross.

View Previous Devotional
Next Devotional