Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Philippians 2:7
But made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men:
7. But made himself of no reputation ] “ But ” here introduces the infinitely gracious action of the Saviour as the contrary to what it would have been had He “thought His Equality with God a prize.” We may paraphrase, “That He did not so think of it, He shewed by making Himself,” &c. See Bp Ellicott’s careful note here, in which this explanation is advocated against that which would paraphrase, “ Although He thought it no usurpation to be equal with God, yet He made, &c.”
“ Himself ” is slightly emphatic by position, laying a stress on the sacred free will of the Lord in His Humiliation.
“ Made himself of no reputation: ” lit., as R.V., emptied Himself. The (Romanist) Rhemish Version, 1582, verbally following the Vulgate ( semetipsum exinanivit), has, “ exinanited Himself.” From the Greek the word kensis ( ) has passed into theological language, appearing here and there in the Fathers, frequently in modern treatises. Of recent years much has been said upon this great mystery in the direction of proving or suggesting that during “the days of His Flesh” (Heb 5:7) the Lord ( practically) parted with His Deity; becoming the (Incarnate) Son of God only in His glorification after death. Such a view seems to contravene many plain testimonies of the Gospels, and most of all the pervading tone of the Gospels, as they present to us in the Lord Jesus on earth a Figure “meek and lowly” indeed, but always infinitely and mysteriously majestic; significantly dependent indeed on the Father, and on the Spirit, but always speaking to man in the manner of One able to deal sovereignly with all man’s needs.
It is enough for us to know that His Humiliation, or to use the word here, Exinanition, Kensis, was profoundly real; that He was pleased, as to His holy Manhood, to live in dependence on the Spirit; while yet we are sure that the inalienable basis of His Personality was always, eternally, presently, Divine. The ultimate and reasoned analysis of the unique Phenomenon, God and Man, One Christ, is, as to its actual consciousness, if we may use the word, a matter more for His knowledge than our enquiry. Bp Lightfoot’s brief note here says nearly all that can be said with reverent certainty: “ ‘He divested Himself’ not of His Divine nature, for this was impossible, but of the glories, the prerogatives, of Deity. This He did by taking upon Him the form of a servant.”
and took upon him] Lit. and better, with R.V., taking. The thought is that the Exinanition was the “taking”; not a process previous to it. In the word “ taking ” the Lord’s free choice and action is again in view.
the form of a servant ] Lit. and better, of a bondservant, a slave. The word rendered “ form ” is the same as that in Php 2:6, on which see note. Here, as there, the thing implied is not semblance but manifestation. He became in reality, and in consequent appearance, a bondservant.
With what special reference is the word “bondservant” here used? Does it point to His stooping to serve men in great humiliation? Or to His undertaking, in the act of becoming Man, that essential condition of man’s true life bondservice to God? The order of words and thought is in favour of the latter. The Apostle goes on to say, in effect, that His taking the slave’s “form” was coincident with His coming “in the likeness of men ” generally, not of specially humiliated or oppressed men. As Man He was “bondservant”. And this points to a bondservice related directly to God, as Lord of man. In this as in other things He was the archetype of all His true followers.
True, our blessed Lord made Himself the servant of all, and on one occasion (John 13) took literally the place and work of a menial attendant; a fact to which much allusion is made by St Chrysostom here. But all the while He was far more Lord than servant, certainly than bondservant, in His relations with men, even in His most tender and gracious relations. Literal “slavery” to man He certainly did not enter upon; royally descended as He was, and toiling as a free artificer, and commanding and teaching always with authority.
and was made ] Lit., coming to be, becoming. The fact is stated as coincident with the last statement. See previous note.
in the likeness of men ] A double suggestion lies in the words; ( a) that He was really like man, as He truly was man; accepting the conditions involved in a truly human exterior, with its liabilities to trial and suffering; and ( b) that He was also more than man, other than man, without which fact there would be not resemblance but mere identity. Cp. a somewhat similar case, Rom 8:3, where lit. “in the likeness of the flesh of sin.”
“ Of men,” not “ of man: ” as if to make the statement as concrete as possible. He appeared not in the likeness of some transcendent and glorified Manhood, but like men as they are.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
But made himself of no reputation – This translation by no means conveys the sense of the original According to this it would seem that he consented to be without distinction or honor among people; or that he was willing to be despised or disregarded. The Greek is heauton ekenosen. The word kenoo means literally, to empty, to make empty, to make vain or void. It is rendered: made void in Rom 4:14; made of none effect, 1Co 1:17; make void, 1Co 9:15; should be vain, 2Co 9:3. The word does not occur elsewhere in the New Testament, except in the passage before us. The essential idea is that of bringing to emptiness, vanity, or nothingness; and, hence, it is applied to a case where one lays aside his rank and dignity, and becomes in respect to that as nothing; that is, he assumes a more humble rank and station. In regard to its meaning here, we may remark:
(1) That it cannot mean that he literally divested himself of his divine nature and perfections, for that was impossible. He could not cease to be omnipotent, and omnipresent, and most holy, and true, and good.
(2) It is conceivable that he might have laid aside, for a time, the symbols or the manifestation of his glory, or that the outward expressions of his majesty in heaven might have been withdrawn. It is conceivable for a divine being to intermit the exercise of his almighty power, since it cannot be supposed that God is always exerting his power to the utmost. And in like manner there might be for a time a laying aside or intermitting of these manifestations or symbols, which were expressive of the divine glory and perfections. Yet,
(3) This supposes no change in the divine nature, or in the essential glory of the divine perfections. When the sun is obscured by a cloud, or in an eclipse, there is no real change of its glory, nor are his beams extinguished, nor is the sun himself in any measure changed. His luster is only for a time obscured. So it might have been in regard to the manifestation of the glory of the Son of God. Of course there is much in regard to this which is obscure, but the language of the apostle undoubtedly implies more than that he took an humble place, or that he demeaned himself in an humble manner. In regard to the actual change respecting his manifestations in heaven, or the withdrawing of the symbols of his glory there, the Scriptures are nearly silent, and conjecture is useless – perhaps improper. The language before us fairly implies that he laid aside that which was expressive of his being divine – that glory which is involved in the phrase being in the form of God – and took upon himself another form and manifestation in the condition of a servant.
And took upon him the form of a servant – The phrase form of a servant, should be allowed to explain the phrase form of God, in Phi 2:6. The form of a servant is that which indicates the condition of a servant, in contradistinction from one of higher rank. It means to appear as a servant, to perform the offices of a servant, and to be regarded as such. He was made like a servant in the lowly condition which he assumed. The whole connection and force of the argument here demands this interpretation. Storr and Rosenmuller interpret this as meaning that he became the servant or minister of God, and that in doing it, it was necessary that he should become a man. But the objection to this is obvious. It greatly weakens the force of the apostles argument. His object is to state the depth of humiliation to which he descended, and this was best done by saying that he descended to the lowest condition of humanity and appeared in the most humble garb. The idea of being a servant or minister of God would not express that, for this is a term which might be applied to the highest angel in heaven. Though the Lord Jesus was not literally a servant or slave, yet what is here affirmed was true of him in the following respects:
(1) He occupied a most lowly condition in life.
(2) He condescended to perform such acts as are appropriate only to those who are servants. I am among you as he that serveth; Luk 22:27; compare Joh 13:4-15.
And was made in the likeness of men – Margin, habit. The Greek word means likeness, resemblance. The meaning is, he was made like unto people by assuming such a body as theirs; see the notes at Rom 8:3.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Php 2:7
But made Himself of no reputation
The humiliation of Christ
I.
How far Christ was lessened.
1. His Godhead was obscured by the interposing veil of our flesh. He emptied Himself of the Divine glory, not by ceasing to be what He was, but by assuming something He was not before.
2. His dignity was lessened. It was a condescension of God to take notice of mans misery (Psa 113:6), much more to take part in it. Three steps in this condescension may be noted.
(1) He who thought it no robbery to be equal with God is made less than God (Joh 14:28), as Mediator.
(2) He was not only lesser than God, but lesser than the angels (Heb 2:7).
(3) In the human nature He was depressed beyond the ordinary condition of man (Psa 22:6; Isa 53:3; Mar 9:12). Born of a poor virgin, His cradle a manger, etc., lived a life of poverty, etc.
II. This was His own voluntary act. This is in no way inconsistent with the action of the Father in sending Him.
1. What He was to do and undergo was proposed to Him and willingly accepted (Heb 10:6-7; Isa 7:5; Pro 8:31).
2. The Scripture assigneth this work to the love and condescension of Christ Himself as the immediate cause of His performance of it (Gal 2:20; Eph 5:25-26; Rev 1:5-6; 2Co 8:9).
III. This work was for our sakes.
1. As our Mediator.
(1) He emptied Himself that we might be filled with all grace.
(2) He was born of a woman that we might be born of God (Gal 4:4-5).
(3) He was made a curse that we might have a blessing (Gal 3:13-14).
(4) He was made poor for us that by His poverty we might be made rich (2Co 8:9).
(5) There are some things in the mediation of Christ which belong to ministry and others to authority. Those which belong to ministry as to be in servants form, and to die; he must be a man for that. Those which belong to authority as to bring us to God convey to us the spirit; and He must be God for that.
2. As our pattern (Php 2:5).
(1) The power of Christs example is general.
(a) It is perfect, for His life is religion exemplified, a visible commentary on Gods Word.
(b) Engaging. Christs submission to a duty should make it engaging to us (Joh 13:14; 1Jn 2:6). Alexander the Great achieved most of his exploits by his example. When hard beset, he would make the first in every action.
(c) Effectual (2Co 3:18).
(d) Encouraging (Heb 2:18; Heb 4:15).
(e) An armour of proof against all temptations (Php 2:5; 1Pe 4:1).
(2) What He teacheth us by making Himself of no reputation.
(a) Patience under indignities undergone for Gods sake (1Pe 2:21; Heb 12:2). Consider if Christ had been unwilling to suffer for us what had been our condition to all eternity! We cannot lose so much for Him as He hath for us (2Co 8:9). We are gainers by Him if we love the world for His sake (Mat 10:29-30.)
(b) Humility. We are far inferior to Christ, and shall we stand so much on our reputation (Mat 11:29; Mat 20:28; Joh 13:3).
(c) More exact obedience (Php 2:8; Heb 5:8-9).
(d) Self-denial (Rom 15:3; Joh 12:27-28; Php 1:20).
(e) Contempt of the world and the glory thereof. (T. Manton, D. D.)
Took upon Him the form of a servant—
The mystery of Christ in the form of a servant
Christ is expressly called Gods servant (Isa 42:1; cf. Mat 12:18), and bondservant (Psa 11:6; cf. Exo 21:6).
I. To whom He became a servant. To mans great Lord and Master (Isa 49:3). It was with His Father He entered into the contract of service (Psa 40:6). It was His Fathers business He was employed in (Luk 2:49; Joh 9:4).
II. For whom He became a servant. For and instead of those who were bound to service, but utterly unable for it.
III. The necessity of His becoming a servant for us for our salvation.
1. Mankind were constituted Gods hired servants by the first covenant, viz., of works, and extend to that in their head the first Adam. Their work was perfect obedience to the holy law; their hire was life (Rom 10:1). The penalty of breaking away from their Master was perpetual bondage under the curse (Gal 3:10).
2. They never made out their service. Through the solicitation of the great runaway servant, the devil, they violated the covenant, and broke away from their Master. So they lost all plea for the hire, and justly became bondmen under the curse of the broken covenant of works (Gal 4:24). Their falling under this curse inferred the loss of their liberty, and constituted them bondmen (Gen 9:25; Jos 9:23).
3. By the breaking of that covenant they lost all their ability for their service, and were left without strength (Rom 5:6). They had no suffering strength to bear their punishment, and so must have perished under it. They had no working strength, for their work arm, once sufficient, was broken; nay, they had neither hand nor heart for their work again (Rom 8:7; Jos 24:19).
4. Howbeit the punishment due to them behoved to be borne, and the service to be made out according to the original contract, the covenant of works; or else they could never have life and salvation (Gen 2:7; Isa 42:21; Gen 28:15).
5. Since all this behoved to be done, and they could not do it, it was necessary for their life and salvation that Christ should come under the curse for them, accept their service, and fully serve it out for them (Gal 3:3-5; Gal 3:13).
IV. The contract of the service–the covenant of grace made between the Father and Christ. Heavens device in this case was that Christ should be the worker for life and salvation to poor sinners; and that they should get life and salvation, through Him, by His grace, and so work from life and salvation received, as sons entitled to the inheritance antecedently to all their working (Rom 6:23; Rom 4:4-5). Here consider–
(1) The contract was entered into from eternity (Tit 1:2).
(2) Its design was–
(a) To illustrate the Divine glory much darkened by the hired servants of Gods own house by sin (Isa 49:3).
(b) To save lost sinners (Isa 49:6).
(3) The service which in this contract He undertook to perform was to fulfil the whole law for them (Heb 10:9).
(4) The covenanted reward of the service was a glorious exaltation to Himself, and eternal life for them (Php 2:9; Tit 1:2).
V. The fulfilling of the service according to the contract. It was a hard service, but He went through with it (Php 2:8).
1. He entered into this service by His being born holy for us, and remained so to the end. Thus He answered the demand which the law had upon them for original holiness as a condition of life (Isa 9:6; Luk 1:35).
2. He went on in His service in the righteousness of His life, being obedient unto death (Php 2:8; Joh 16:4).
3. Having suffered all His life long, He completed and finished His service in His death and burial; thus answering for them the laws demand of satisfaction for sin (Joh 19:30). The term of His continuance in this state of servitude was, according to the covenant, till death, but no longer (Joh 9:4; Job 3:19; Rom 4:9).
VI. Wherefore he engaged in this service.
1. Love to God and man (Exo 21:5).
2. He took it on Him for releasing us from that state of bondage into which our father Adam, by his mismanagement, had brought all mankind. What Judah offered to do in the case of Benjamin (Gen 44:33), Christ really performed in the case of His brethren.
3. To bring them into a state of adoption in the family of God. He became a bondservant that they might become sons and daughters (Gal 4:1-5).
VII. The use.
1. To all strangers to Jesus Christ: ye are bondmen under the law, and so–
(1) It lies upon you to fulfil the service to which man was bound by the covenant of works, viz., perfect obedience under the pain of the curse (Rom 3:19). As you are unable for this you can never be saved while out of Christ.
2. It lies upon you to bear the punishment due to you for breaking away from your Lord and Master (Gen 2:17).
2. Let all be exhorted to flee to Christ, and by faith embrace Him, and the service performed by Him as their only plea for life and salvation. Surely it will be glad tidings to the poor broken hearted sinner, who sees that he cannot serve the Lord according to the demand of the law, to know that there is a service performed by the Mediator for him which is perfect in the eye of the law, and that a way of reconciliation is opened.
VIII. Improvement.
1. If you have any part or lot in this matter of Christs service, let it be the business of your life to serve the Lord Christ. Consider–
(1) He was in the form of God who served for you, and delivered you from the worst of masters.
(2) He has no need of your service, but ye were in absolute need of His service for you.
(3) The service He rendered you was hard service; the yoke He puts upon you is easy, and the burden light.
(4) Christ fulfilled all righteousness for you to the end that you might serve Him in holiness and righteousness.
(5) Christ served you ungrudgingly, do not grudge what you give or do for Him.
(6) As Christ was highly exalted after His service so will you be after yours. Be faithful therefore.
2. Redeemed by Christ.
(1) In what spirit are we to serve Him.
(a) Not as slaves, but as children (Gal 4:7). This is the only acceptable service.
(b) Out of love for Him (Heb 6:10; 2Co 5:14; 2Ti 1:7).
(c) Universally (Col 4:12).
(d) Constantly (Psa 119:112).
(2) How are we to serve Him.
(a) By being of a loving disposition towards our brethren.
(b) By doing good as we have opportunity (Gal 6:10).
(c) Put on bowels of mercies towards those who are in distress (Col 3:12).
(d) Show a strict regard for justice in your dealings with men as Christ did in His dealings towards God for you.
(e) Be humble (Joh 13:14-15). (T. Boston, D. D.)
Christ a slave
The word servant does not convey to us the degree of degradation which it meant centuries ago. For service has been dignified since Christ was a servant. We know nothing now more honourable than Christian service. But He first taught us to call our servants friends.
I. Look at some of the laws respecting Jewish slaves so as to estimate the humiliation of Jesus; and these were mild compared with those that obtained among the Romans.
1. No slave could have any right as a citizen. If injured he had no redress. As for our Saviour, when subjected to the most outrageous wrong, no arm of the law was outstretched for His defence. His judgment was taken away.
2. The slave could hold no property. The Servant of servants had not where to lay His head; no money to pay His taxes; no clothes but such as privileged hands had made for Him.
3. The slave, in the eye of the law, was a mere chattel, which could be bought and sold; for the base sum of less than three pounds Judas sold his Lord.
4. At death the slave might be scourged and tortured as none other might, and the bitterest and vilest death was assigned to Him. See Jesus under the lash and on the cross the slave.
5. The law said the slave was nothing less than a dead man; Christ was a worm and no man.
II. As a slave Christ had two duties to execute.
1. To His Father.
(1) God had made the power of Jesus to do His work depend on His faithfulness. By His knowledge shall my righteous servant justify many. Had He not been righteous as a servant, He could not have justified the sinner.
(2) But how perfect was His course of servitude, how continuous, laborious, devoted (Psa 40:1-17; cf. Heb 10:1-39): The Jewish slave wishing, for the love he bare his master, to continue in his service, had his ear fastened for a while with an awl to his masters door in token of his abiding always in his service. So Christ, in the language of the slave, loves to say, Mine ears hast Thou opened, and adds the reason, I delight, etc.
2. To His people. His time while He lived on earth was not His own but theirs. He was at every ones call. His day was all work for the creature; His night communion with the Creator. The smallest things were not beneath His attention (Joh 13:1-38.).
III. Inferences.
1. Of all the names a Christian can wear there is not one which places him so near his Master as this–a servant of God. St. Paul put it above his apostleship.
2. To own that title you must not regard it as a figure of speech.
(1) Your time is not your own.
(2) Your possessions–money, talents, power.
(3) Be clothed therefore with humility, and gird yourself with energy. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
Made in the likeness of men–
Christ a man
1. As soon as the Saviour had resolved to take upon Him the form of a servant, it followed that He should be made in the likeness of men. Fallen man is the most servile thing in Gods universe–a bond slave of Satan, Sold under sin–the servant of uncleanness. His passions are his masters, his fears his chains, death his cruel tyrant.
2. We must be careful not to suffer our conviction of the Deity of Christ to weaken our apprehension of His perfect manhood. For if Christ be not absolutely a man, if His divinity come in, in the least degree, to qualify His humanity, then He practically ceases to be an example, and, indeed, a substitute.
I. It was not the body of Christ only which was human while His soul was divine, but that soul and body were equally in the likeness of men.
1. His bodily presence stood forth always visibly and palpably a man. In the likeness of the infant He lay in the manger, of the boy He sat in the temple, of the man He walked the length and breadth of the land. The labouring man has the privilege of resemblance, for it is not unlikely that He worked at His fathers trade. Rest and clothes and food and warmth He needed like us.
2. Let us trace on the likeness into His spiritual being.
(1) It is a law of the mind that it grows. Jesus grew in wisdom.
(2) That we are conscious of joy and sorrow. Once Christ rejoiced in Spirit, and twice shed tears.
(3) That we must lean on some one, our God and our friend. So did Jesus.
(4) That we should be tempted. He imitated us in His conflict with the prince of darkness.
(5) In deep thoughts he had the counterpart of ours, the shrinking back of the obedient and willing spirit as it recoils from natures throes.
(6) He was utterly blameless; yet He knew sin by experience, for He bore it.
II. The manhood Christ assumed is full of the deepest comfort to His Church.
1. All the nature of our race was gathered and concentrated into that one human life. He stood forth as the great representative man.
2. Thus it was that Christ went down to His grave, and when He rose and was glorified the great representative principle went on. He is not the solitary conqueror entered into His rest; but the forerunner and earnest of His saints. He holds ground for us till, in due time, we shall come.
3. And so long as the needful processes of the preparation go on He there lives, and intercedes, and rules, and wears the very form in which He suffered. How certain, then, His sympathy.
III. Therefore reverence manhood. Respect a body which has such fellowships; be tender to the corporeal wants of the members of the body of Christ. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
The humiliation of Christ
I. In His incarnation. The Ruler of all brought to the state of a creature.
1. To the state of an inferior creature, a man, not an angel,
2. At a time when this nature was stained by sin.
3. To be scorned by men.
4. Deprived of the joys of heaven.
5. The offspring of a poor woman.
II. In His life.
1. Born in a stable.
2. Tempted of Satan.
3. Inured to poverty.
4. Ungratefully received by His own and by the world.
III. In His death–that of a malefactor. (J. Flavel.)
The possibility of Christs humiliation
We have no difficulty in conceiving how a man of highest virtue, and noblest birth, and clearest intelligence, could assume an outward garb which would completely belie or hide his real character. A king need not always wear the royal robes and sit on a throne. He may become a shepherd on the him, a sailor before the mast, a servant of his own servants. Missionaries–and in this case the moral analogy is more perfect–after learning the language of a barbarous people, have gone among them, conforming to all their habits as far as they could, living a dark, rude life, submitting to every kind of trial and privation, in order to a great and beneficent end. Is it then to be said, in the ignorance of our pride, in the supercilious presumption of our poor narrow thought, that the Infinite One must always be in Divine state and glory, in one manifestation, in one form of His infinite life, that whatever transpires in the history of the world or the universe, He can do nothing except what He has been forever doing–speak no new word–make no new revelation of Himself? The assertion that God cannot lay aside some of what we may call the accidents of His being, and invest Himself in another way, is almost to assert that He is not God at all. (A. Raleigh, D. D.)
Emptied Himself
All His attributes He veiled and hid; His infinity, to abide, like other unborn babes, within the virgins womb; His eternity, to receive birth in time, younger than His creatures; His unchangeableness, to grow in stature, and (as it would seem) for His earthly form to decay, and be worn by His sufferings; His wisdom, for our sake and among us to be ignorant, as man, of that which, as Lord, He knew; His self-sufficingness, that He, who had all things, became as though He had nothing. He forewent not things without Him only; He forewent Himself He, the Creator, not only made Himself to need the creatures which He had formed, and was without them–He was hungry and thirsty, and wearied–but even in the things which He wrought, He depended not alone on the Godhead within Him but on the Father. His works were not His own works but His Fathers. He came not to do His own will, but His Fathers. He prayed, and praying was heard, though He Himself was God. He was strengthened as man, by the angel, whom, as God, He created. Again, how must He have emptied Himself of His majesty, who, when, with a word, He could have destroyed the ungodly, and with the breath of His mouth have slain the wicked, was Himself sold into their hands for the price of a bondslave. He hid not His face from shame and spitting, before whom angels veil their faces. He emptied Himself of His immortality, and the immortal died. He became subject to death, the penalty of sin. But what seems yet more amazing, He was content to veil even that, in Himself, wherein, so to say, God is most God, the glory of the divinity, His holy being, whereby He hateth all iniquity. He who is the Truth, was contented to be called that deceiver. He hid His holiness, so that His apostate angel shrank not from approaching Him, to tempt Him. He veiled the very humility wherewith He humbled Himself to be obedient, so that Satan thought that He might be tempted through pride. He was content to he thought able to covet the creatures which He had made, and, like us, to prefer them to the Father; yea, and the very lowest of the creatures, which even man can despise. They called Him a gluttonous man, and a wine bibber. We know, say they, that this man is a sinner. They reproached Him for disobedience to the Father, and breaking the law which He gave. So wholly was He made like unto us in all things, sin only excepted, that man could not discern that He, the holy God, was not (shocking to say) unholy man. (E. B. Pusey, D. D.)
Condescension of Christ
During one of the campaigns in the American Civil War, when the winter weather was very severe, some of Stonewall Jacksons men having crawled out in the morning from their snow-laden blankets, half frozen, began to curse him as the cause of their sufferings. He lay close by under a tree, also snowed under, and heard all this: but, without noticing it, presently crawled out too, and, shaking off the snow, made some jocular remark to the nearest men, who had no idea he had ridden up in the night and lain down amongst them! The incident ran through the army in a few hours, and reconciled his followers to all the hardships of the expedition, and fully reestablished his popularity. (M. O. Mackay.)
The humanity of Christ
From eternity there was the idea and image of a man in the mind of God. That man was perfect. Adam was created in his innocence a type or shadow of that man. When Adam lost the likeness, the great design of God was to restore it. To this end, Christ, who was always the real original of that man as he lay in the purposes of God, determined to take our nature. From time to time, in earnest of His future purpose, He appeared as a man to the Old Testament saints. At last, when the appointed period arrived, Christ came after the flesh, born of a woman. He was not at first that perfect man which lay in the intention of the Father before all ages, but He was like it, as the shadow is to the substance; and He gradually grew into it. By successive processes He attained it. First, He was natural; then, after His resurrection, He was spiritual; then, after His ascension, He was glorious; and now, still a man, entirely a man, wearing our framework, and carrying our affections, He is that very eternal man conceived in the bosom of God, and of which both Adam in Paradise and He in Bethlehem were made to be the copy and the likeness. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
And being found in fashion as a man.—
The Saviours fashion
I. The fashion in which Christ was found–that of a man.
1. Real, not in appearance only.
2. Perfect, both body and soul, with all the attributes of our humanity.
3. Sinless. It was needful for Him to assume this fashion.
(1) Otherwise our sins could not be atoned for.
(2) Nor could He have become the Head of the Church. It is impossible to admire this fashion too much.
II. What He endured in that fashion.
1. He humbled Himself to teach us the sin and folly of pride and the duty of humility.
2. He became obedient to teach us passive and active obedience to Gods will.
(1) This obedience was perfect–to death.
(2) Acceptable.
(3) He endured the cross to teach us self-denial.
III. The permanence of that fashion. Other fashions change. This never. He wears the body that will be His through eternity. Conclusion:
1. This is the only fashion in which salvation can be found.
2. This is the only pattern for our holiness. (J. Irons.)
Christ degraded
1. The expressions which assert Christs incarnation imply His Deity. Who would say of any merely human being that he was found in fashion as a man.
2. Christ might have been man without humiliation: e.g., had He assumed the glorious body He now wears.
3. The most beautiful feature about Christs humiliation was that it was never prominent, but always self-forgetful. The grace of a humble mind is that it is too humble to look humble. Our Lords humiliation may be regarded in four stages.
I. In His incarnation. How imperceptible that was. No parade. Never did infant enter life with less consequence.
II. In His preministerial life.
1. There was the humiliation of the flight and exile into Egypt.
2. His choice of Nazareth as a home, the name of which fastened a stigma and a prejudice upon Him all His days.
3. His life of subjection and labour.
III. In His public ministry.
1. His submission to baptism. John was struck with the self-abasement of this act. Ordinances, however precious, are humbling because the badge of a fallen state.
2. His temptation. There are things we come in contact with which, though not hurtful, leave a feeling of debasement.
3. His poverty and privation.
4. His intercourse with the coarse and the sinful.
5. His subjection to the cavil of the unbeliever, and the jest of the profane.
IV. In His death.
1. The circumstances of His arrest and trial.
2. The character of His punishment.
3. His dissolution. It was humiliation indeed for God to become man; much more, being man, to die. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
The humiliation of Christ
In the text we have–
1. The depth of Christs humiliation.
(1) Specified–death.
(2) Aggravated death of the cross.
2. The manner thereof.
(1) Voluntary–humbled Himself.
(2) Obedient.
The Scripture marks the special stages of His humiliation.
1. He stooped to become a man. Had Christ been made an angel it had been infinitely below Himself.
2. He condescended to put His neck under the yoke of the law. (Gal 4:4). A creature is indispensably subjected to the law of its Maker, by virtue of its creatureship and dependence, and is involved in no humiliation. But the Son of God is the Law Maker. He submitted to the ceremonial law in His circumcision, and to the moral law in His life; all which subjection was not a debt to God, but a voluntary subscription. The law is not made, in some sense, for a righteous man (1Ti 1:9), but is not made in any sense for the glorious God.
3. He appeared in the likeness of sinful flesh (Rom 8:3). He trod not one step awry in sin, but many of the footsteps of sin appeared upon Him: e.g.
(1) Poverty. Sin was the great bankrupt that brought all to beggary, and so poverty is the likeness of sin.
(2) Sorrow (Isa 53:3). The same Hebrew word stands for both.
(3) Shame and reproach. Sin was the inlet of shame (Gen 3:7). So Christ (Isa 53:3; Psa 27:6).
(4) The withdrawment of the Father and clouding the light of His countenance (Mat 27:46, cf. Isa 59:2).
(4) Death. In amplification of this, the principal act of Christs humiliation, note–
I. What kind of death Christ humbled Himself unto. Not a natural death, nor a mere violent death, but a violent death having three embittering circumstances.
1. Pain. The easiest death is painful, however downy the bed. The first mention of Christs death is that of bruising (Gen 3:15; Isa 53:10). So painful was it in thought that Christ shrunk from it (Mat 26:39). Three things made the actual death painful.
(1) The piercing His hands and feet, those sinews and sensitive parts.
(2) The extension and distortion of His body.
(3) The slowness and gradual approach of death. Six complete hours in the heat of the day was Christ in dying (Mar 15:25; cf. verse 34).
2. Shame. There is nothing so sharp and intolerable, not even pain, to a noble spirit as shame (Heb 12:2). The cross was an ignominious death, and Christ endured it amidst circumstances of aggravated ignominy, nakedness, and scorn. All his offices were derided: His Priestly (Mat 27:42); His prophetical (Luk 22:64); His Kingly (Joh 19:2-3). Notorious villains were crucified with Him. He suffered without the gate (Heb 12:12; Lev 24:14).
3. Curse. Pain was bad, shame worse, curse worst of all (Deu 21:23; Gal 3:13; Act 5:30).
II. In what manner Christ underwent this death.
1. Willingly. His sacrifice was a free-wilt offering. Neither the Fathers ordination nor mens violence constituted the sacrifice (Psa 40:7-8; Joh 10:17-18). He might have avoided it (Mat 26:53), but so far from that He anticipated His executioners (Joh 19:33). But He was more than willing (Luk 12:50).
2. Obediently. It was His will to die; and yet He died not of His own will, but of His Fathers. The two are conjoined in Heb 10:7, and Joh 10:18. This obedience was the best part of His sacrifice (1Sa 15:22; Mat 26:39).
3. Humbly and meekly–(Isa 53:7)–from His expostulation with Judas (Mat 26:50) to His last prayer (Luk 23:34) all is that of One who, when He suffered He threatened not (1Pe 2:23).
III. Upon what grounds Christ thus humbled Himself to death.
1. That Scripture prophecies might be accomplished (Isa 63:1; Gen 3:15; Luk 24:25-26).
2. That Scripture types might be fulfilled–Isaac, the offerings, the brazen serpent, etc.
3. That His will and testament might be firm and effectual (Heb 9:16-17; Luk 22:20).
4. That justice might be satisfied (Heb 9:22; Rom 3:25-26).
5. That He that hath the power of death might be destroyed (Heb 2:14).
6. To take away the meritorious cause of death, namely, sin (Rom 8:3; Rom 6:10-11; Dan 9:24-26). Application: Three uses may be made of this doctrine.
1. For information.
(1) This lets us see the transcendent and inexpressible love of Christ to poor sinners (Gal 2:20).
(2) The horrible and cursed evil of sin to need such a remedy.
(3) The exact and impartial justice of God and His most righteous remedy against sin. Rather than that sin should go unpunished He spared not His own Son (Rom 3:25).
(4) This is sad and dreadful news to all impenitent sinners (Heb 10:29).
2. For exhortation. If Christ shed His blood for sin
(1) let us shed the blood of sin (Rom 6:10-11; Gal 5:24).
(2) Let our lives run out for Christ in a vigorous activity (2Co 5:14-15; Tit 2:14).
(3) Let us praise Him exceedingly, and raise Him in our esteem above everything and every one else (1Pe 2:7; 1Co 2:2; Php 3:8; Mat 10:37).
(4) Let us prize highly our own souls that were purchased at such a price (1Pe 1:18).
(5) Let us be willing, if need be, to shed our blood for Him (Act 20:24; Rev 12:11; Heb 12:4).
(6) By faith and hearty acceptance of Christ, let us put in for a share of, and get an interest in Christs blood (Rom 3:25; Heb 9:14).
3. For comfort.
(1) Your enemies are foiled. The justice of God is satisfied; the law is fulfilled; Satan is subdued; sin is abolished as it binds over to punishment, and is reflected in the conscience by way of accusation; death is slain.
(2) Your person is accepted.
(3) Christ is willing to do anything for thee.
(4) Heaven is opened to thee (Heb 10:19). (J. Meriton, D. D.)
The obedience of Christ
I. Its characteristics.
1. Produced by the Spirit. He was tempted and overcame by the Holy Ghost.
2. Perfectly human, or it would be no example to us.
3. Progressive. Though He were a Son, etc. It grew with the growth of obligations.
4. Active and passive.
II. Its nature.
1. He obeyed the law. Thy law is within my heart was the language of His whole life.
(1) As an antitype He fulfilled the whole law of sacrifice.
(2) As a devout Jew, He fulfilled the whole ceremonial law.
(3) As citizen of the world He fulfilled the political law by paying taxes.
(4) As a man, He fulfilled the whole moral law.
(5) As a child of God He fulfilled the spiritual law.
2. Christ was always obeying inward principle. His outward life was the reflection of His sense of duty. How often was I must upon His lips.
3. Christ always set His life to the meridian of Scripture–It is written.
4. He was the most obedient of Sons to His heavenly Father–I can of Myself do nothing.
III. The harmonious adjustment of its two-fold obligations.
1. As a child He was subject to His mother–but if interfered with in His work there were the Woman; what have I to do with thee? or Who is My mother?
2. As a subject of the state He pays the tribute at the same moment that He asserts His claim and privilege as the Son of God. Render unto Caesar, etc.
IV. Its development.
1. As an infant He was obedient to circumcision.
2. His childhood and early manhood were subject to parental authority.
3. At thirty His argument for baptism is Thus it becometh us, etc.
4. In obedience to the Holy Ghost He goes into the desert and conquers by It is written, etc.
5. The yoke He imposes on His disciples is His own–obedience.
6. He is Lord of the Sabbath, but obeys the Sabbath.
7. The Transfiguration speaks of Sonship and service.
8. His death was the completion of His life of obedience. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
Obedient unto death
The phrase states the landing place of Christs career of humiliation, the antipodes of the contrast, the nadir below which it was impossible for Him to go.
I. What is death–especially as expressive of the condition to which Jesus humbled Himself? Our modern conception of death has been so illumined by the doctrine of Christian immortality that we are inclined to conceive of the death of Christ simply as an analogue of ours. But death, in the person of Jesus, was the culminating catastrophe in the history of the Man of sorrows. To us death is the chalice whose poison has been changed by the chemistry of redeeming love into nectar; to Jesus it was a cup full of the concentrated dregs of woe. To us it is a shaft whose sting has been removed; to Him it was an arrow envenomed by the wrath of God against sin. To us it is a victory over the last and mightiest form of evil; to Him it was a surrender to the masterful forces of disorganization and ruin. To us it is an introduction into the presence and companionship of God; to Him it was an abandonment into darkness unrelieved by a ray of Divine light, and whose solitude was unblessed by a whisper of Divine love. The Atonement was no compromise between the demands of justice and the pleadings of mercy. Justice was exacted of Jesus, and mercy was proffered to man. The Deity of Christ gave inconceivable sensitiveness to the agonized consciousness of Jesus; and who shall say that, in that brief hour, Jesus did not experience a sense of the awful demerit of sin and of the fierceness of Gods wrath against it transcending the anguish of a lost soul?
II. Jesus became obedient unto death in that–
1. Death was the objective end of His mission. He came in order to do. It is possible to conceive that Jesus might have assumed our nature without submitting to the law of death. In becoming a man He did not necessarily become mortal, for mortality is not an essential condition of humanity. Adam was human, but he was not created mortal. Mortality, with Him, was a consequence of disobedience; and so Jesus, in becoming human, had He seen fit, might have been exempt from the law of death, or might have passed away by a translation, such as is recorded of Enoch and Elijah, and such as did transpire in His own history after He had risen, to die no more. But neither of these possibilities were consistent with the mission of Jesus. Without dying, His object in coming into the world would have failed of being accomplished. In this respect His death differed from ours; we are not brought into this world simply for the purpose of dying; we die because we cannot help dying. But it behoved Jesus to die. He became obedient unto death. If His object in coming into the world was to save men by the lustre of His living and by the splendour of His philosophy, why need He to have died, and why, especially, need He always have insisted upon the necessity of His death, in order that by dying He might accomplish the object which He had undertaken?
2. By the voluntary surrender of His life. Death, to us, is a surrender to an inevitable, from which we would prefer to be exempt, and at the best in most cases, it is a passive submission to a necessity, but the death of Jesus was Jesus in action.
3. In that His dying was the supreme expression of His submission to the will of the Father. It was the fitting crown of a life whose explanation was My meat is to do the will, etc.
III. Why, in the economy of God was it needful that Jesus should submit to death?
1. Because His subjection to the law of death was the highest, and an exhaustive test of the absolute subordination of His will to the will of His Father.
2. The obedience of Jesus unto death became the exhaustive ground on which God could justly remit the penalty pronounced against the sinner.
3. As the reward of His obedience Jesus was empowered with the prerogative of bestowing the gift of eternal life on all that believe on His name. (R. Jefferey, D. D.)
The death of the cross was—
I. A voluntary death.
II. A death of infinite love.
III. A death of kingly power.
IV. A death of terrible bodily pain and mysterious mental anguish.
V. A death of calm assurance. (R. H. Giles, B. A.)
The passion of our blessed Saviour
1. When in consequence of original apostasy from God man had forfeited the Divine amity, when having deserted his natural Lord, other lords had got dominion over him, when according to an eternal rule of justice he stood adjudged to destruction, when all the world stood guilty before God and no remedy did appear, God out of infinite goodness designed our redemption.
2. How could this happy design be compassed in consistence with the glory, justice, and truth of God?
3. God was pleased to prosecute it, as thereby no wise to impair but rather to advance His glory. He accordingly would be sued for mercy, nor would he grant it without compensation, and so did find us a Mediator and furnish us with means to satisfy Him.
4. But how? Where was there a Mediator worthy to intercede on our behalf? Where amongst men, one, however innocent, sufficient to do more than satisfy for himself? Where among angels, seeing that they cannot discharge more than their own debts of gratitude and service?
4. Wherefore seeing that a superabundant dignity of person was required Gods arm brought salvation.
5. But how could God undertake the business? Could He become a suitor to His offended self? No, man must concur in the transaction: some amends must issue from him as the offending party. So the Eternal Word assumed human flesh and merited Gods favour to us by a perfect obedience to the law, and satisfying Divine justice by pouring forth His blood in sacrifice for our sins. In this kind of passion (the death of the cross) consider divers notable adjuncts.
I. Its being in appearance criminal, as in semblance being an execution of justice on Him. He was numbered among the transgressors. Made sin for us. He was impeached of the highest crimes, and, although innocent, for them suffered death. But why such a death, since any would have been sufficient; and why such a death odious alike to Jew and Gentile?
1. As our Saviour freely undertook a life of the greatest meanness and hardship, so we might be pleased to undergo such a death.
(1) It has been well said that no man expresses such a devotion to virtue as he who forfeits the repute of being a good man, that he may not lose the conscience of being such. So our Lord was content not only to expose His life, but His fame, for the interest of goodness.
(2) Had He died otherwise, He might have seemed to purchase our welfare at a somewhat easier rate. He industriously shunned a death such as might have brought Him honour when exposed to it by the malignity of the Pharisees. Accordingly this death did not fall on Him by surprise or chance. He foresaw it from the beginning, and regarded it with satisfaction.
2. This death best suited the character of His undertaking. We deserve open condemnation and exemplary punishment, wherefore He was pleased to undergo not only an equivalent pain for us, but in a sort equal blame before God and man.
3. Seeing that our Lords death was a satisfaction to Divine justice, it was most fit that it should be in a way wherein Gods right is most nearly concerned and plainly discernible. All judgment, as Moses says, is Gods, or is administered by authority derived from Him, magistrates being His officers. So our Lord, as His answer to Pilate testifies, received the human judgment as Gods. Had He suffered by private malice, His obedience had been less remarkable.
4. Our Saviour in any other way could hardly have displayed so many virtues to such advantage. His constancy, meekness, charity, etc., were seen by vast multitudes, and made matters of the greatest notoriety. Plato says that to approve a man righteous, he must be scourged, tortured, bound, have his eyes burnt out, and, at the close, having suffered all evils, must be impaled. The Greeks, then, in consistence with their own wisdom, could not reasonably scorn the Cross, which Christ freely chose to recommend the most excellent virtues to imitation.
II. Its being most painful, which demonstrated–
1. The vehemence of His love.
2. The heinousness of our sins.
3. The value of the compensation.
4. The exemplification of the hardest duties of obedience and patience.
III. Its being most shameful–a Roman punishment reserved for slaves, answering to the Jewish punishment of hanging up dead bodies. Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree.
1. This, ignominious in itself, exposed the sufferer to the scorn of the rude vulgar.
2. We need not doubt that our Saviour, as a man, endowed with human sensibilities, felt these indignities; and not only so, but the infinite dignity of His person and the perfect innocency of His life must have enhanced His sufferings. And so we read, See if there be any sorrow like my sorrow.
3. And further, there was the shameful burden of sin which He bore.
IV. Its peculiar advantageousness to the designs of our Lord in suffering.
1. It was very notorious, and lasted a competent time. Had He been privately or suddenly dispatched, no great notice would have been taken of it, nor would it have been so fully proved.
2. The nature of His kingdom was thereby signified. None but a spiritual kingdom could He have designed who submitted to this suffering.
3. It was a most convenient touchstone to prove the genuine disposition and work of men, so as to discriminate those who can discern and love true goodness though so disfigured, and not be scandalized by the Cross.
4. By it Gods special providence was discovered, and His glory illustrated in the propagation of the gospel; for how could such a sufferer gain so general an opinion in the world of being the Lord of life and glory without Gods miraculous aid?
V. Its practical efficacy. No point is more fruitful in wholesome instruction, more forcible to kindle devout affections, more efficacious in affording incentives to a pious life.
1. We are hence obliged with affection and gratitude to adore each person in the blessed Trinity.
(1) The Father giving the Son.
(2) The Son giving Himself.
(3) The Spirit assisting the Son to offer Himself without spot.
2. What surer ground can there be of faith and hope in God If God spared not His own Son, etc. Who can doubt of Gods goodness, despair of Gods mercy, after this.
3. It should yield great joy to know that Christ hung there not only as a resolute sufferer, but as a noble conqueror over the devil, the world, the flesh, death, wrath, enmity, and strife, etc.
4. It should give us a humbling sense of our weakness and vileness to know that we needed such succour. Pride is madness in the presence of Him who made Himself of no reputation.
5. But as this contemplation doth breed sober humility, it should also preserve us from base abjectness of mind; for had not God esteemed us, He would not have debased Himself.
6. Can we reflect on this event without detestation of sin, which brought such a death on the Redeemer.
7. What in reason can be more powerful towards working penitential sorrow and religious fear, and stimulating true obedience?
8. It affords strong engagements to charity, to know that out of compassion for us Christ suffered.
9. It should breed a disregard for the world and its vanities, and reconcile us to even the worst condition? For who can suffer as Christ suffered. 10. It will incline us to submit cheerfully to Gods will to remember that Christ learned obedience by the things He suffered. (L. Barrow, D. D.)
The Cross the fountain of merit
I. The nature of Christs merit.
1. Let us gain a clear idea of a meritorious act.
(1) It must be good. Actions claiming the highest regards of God are those which have an intrinsic perfectness, and which, when looked at on all sides, are in entire correspondence with the mind and will of God. Christs actions in perfectness contrast with those of the creature. Their peculiar goodness arises from the absence of any stain of sin and any material defect: our good actions have both these drawbacks.
(2) It must be voluntary. Even an heroic action loses its moral value if necessitated. Personal effort freely made lies at the root of all sacrifice. Christs actions were of this character (Rom 15:36; Luk 22:42).
(3) Our Lords actions could have obtained no merit, whatever their perfection, had they resulted only from His natural powers. Nature, even when pure, cannot purchase a supernatural reward. Grace must aid and enrich the operation of the human faculties. Even in Christ grace imparted worth to His natural actions (Joh 5:19). Christ as man had within Himself the foundations of a true merit, and by His Divine personality communicated to His actions an infinite value.
2. Yet after all, with this combination of natural, super natural, and Divine energies in the work of Christ, its claim on Divine retribution must rest on some covenant or promise. Merit in the sense of an action to which a reward is due on grounds of justice can only exist where there is some stipulation. The merit which appeals to goodness sets up no claim; that which rests on fidelity involves a promise; that which trusts to the justice of the rewarder implies a covenant. Not to reward in the one case may be churlishness; in the other it would be to break ones word; whilst in the third there would be positive dishonesty. For God therefore to be liable to any claim, He must have graciously condescended to involve Himself in an obligation. Such a covenant was made with Abraham (Heb 6:17-18). The entering into covenant and confirming by an oath were human types and shadows of the great covenant between God and man in Christ (Heb 7:21). God has entered into covenant with man in Christ to crown with a reward those works which Christ first wrought in Himself, and after wards by His grace should work through His members. All is traceable to Divine mercy as its first source (Psa 62:12), yet it is the Divine justice which is represented as under an obligation to repay the services which are rendered (Heb 6:10). There is nothing derogatory to the sacred manhood of Christ in this covenant. If the Son could address the Father, and say, Lo, I come, etc., we can conceive the human will of Christ in fulfilling the Fathers will as resting on the Divine promise (Psa 16:10-11; Act 1:4).
II. The cross as its fountain.
1. The merit of the Cross rested on the whole of His life: as He foresaw His passion, so He accepted it.
2. The Cross is the great instrument in the acquirement of merit on two grounds. Merit may be calculated by the condition of the person who merits, or by the difficulty of the action. Thus if Adam in Paradise, and some of His fallen descendants were to perform the same virtuous action, the act of the former would have more merit in the one sense; the act of the latter in the other. In the latter sense the Cross outstrips all other portions of our Saviours life in its value. In it the activities of endurance were taxed to the utmost limit. To bear up under fierce pain for a few hours is a greater test of moral strength than the lifelong efforts of a healthy person. Not, however, that suffering in itself is acceptable to God; the thief suffered; it was the way in which the purpose for which it was borne which made it acceptable.
3. The Cross completed the treasure of merit. The Cross was the ultimate limit of those labours which purchased a reward. The resurrection, ascension, etc., could add nothing. Merit ceased with the Cross: what follows is reward (Joh 19:30).
4. The atoning value of the Cross lay in the removal of a hindrance: its meritoriousness acquired a positive gain. The removal of sin was the preliminary to Divine communications. Human nature was not left in a state of neutrality, as if God should look upon it without wrath or favour, hut was again to become the subject of Divine complacency.
III. The object for whom this merit was acquired.
1. For Himself (verse 9; Heb 2:9; Luk 24:26; Luk 24:46; Psa 110:7; Heb 12:2). It was not simply glory for His body that He purchased, but exaltation and kingly power; a name above every name.
2. For all. He took the nature of all, and thus merited for all (Heb 2:14). But although He merited for all, all do not receive the grace He purchased. A fountain is useless to the thirsty unless they drink. What is necessary therefore is for us to become the recipients of His grace? We must have union with Christ for pardon and life (Joh 15:16; Joh 1:16; 2Pe 1:4). Christ saves by becoming a new principle of life in the soul through the action of the Divine Spirit. (W. H. Hutchings, M. A.)
Christs humiliation and exaltation
(text and following):–
I. For this cause.
1. A cause there is. God ever exalts for a cause. Here on earth it is otherwise. Some men as Shebna, Haman, Sanballat, are exalted no man knows wherefor.
2. For what cause? His humility. Of all causes not for that, says the world. The word was not in the list of heathen virtues. Yet this last virtue is the ground of Christ exulting.
(1) He humbled–so great a person. For one of mean estate to be humble is no great praise, it were a fault were he not; but for a king, nay the King of kings to show this great humility, is a cause indeed.
(2) Himself. Of His own accord. One may be humbled and not humble. Pharaoh was humbled by His ten plagues. Simon was compelled to humble his neck under the Cross. But here is true humility.
(3) It was not Absaloms humility, in show, his heart being full of pride and rebellion. And yet it is a glory for humility that even proud men take a pride to shroud themselves in her mantle. But it is not humble courtesy, but humble obedience here.
(4) But there is an obedience which cometh from natural reason; but some other there be wherein there is no other reason but the will of a lawful superior. All look to the former, very few to the latter; but even so obeyed Christ.
(5) The extent of our obedience is a matter considerable. Obedience in some petty matter is little worth. How far obedient? Until what? Unto humanity had been enough, to servitude were more. But Christs obedience was unto–
(a) Death. That staggers the best of us. We love obedience in a whole skin. And why should obedience come to that? Death is the wages of sin. Obedient and yet put to death? Even so; rather than lose His obedience He lost His life.
(b) The worst death. Nay, if He must die, let Him die a honest fair death. Not so.
II. God hath highly exalted Him. This exaltation is–
1. Personal.
(1) From whence. From death. His humiliation had been to the ground, into the lowest parts of it; His exaltation was from thence.
(2) Whither. From death to life, from shame to glory, from the form of a servant to the dignity of a sovereign. Not to Lazarus life again, but to life immortal; from shame to the glory of the Father which shall never fade, as all here shall.
2. The exaltation of His name, the amends for the Cross. Without a name what is exalting? Things that are exalted seem not to be so until their name go abroad in the world. And when men are so high that they cannot get higher there is no way to exalt them but to dilate their names, which every noble generous spirit had rather have than any dignity. How will they jeopard dignity and even life but to leave a glorious name behind them. But what name was given here? the name of Jesus.
(1) Of this giving three doubts arise.
(a) How given. Him and others had it also (Heb 4:8; Hag 1:1). They had it of men, He of God. All these Jesuses had need of and were glad to lay hold of the skirts of this Jesus to be saved by Him.
(b) He had it before. True, but by a kind of anticipation, for it never had its perfect verification till after the crucifixion.
(c) But if given Him of grace, where is the merit then? Answer. That which is due may be cheerfully parted with as though it were a gift. But this grace is not the grace of adoption, but that of union.
(2) How is this name above all names.
(a) To Him. It is esteemed more than any other title of Deity by Him; because His glory is in it joined to our safety.
(b) To us. For it is the only name by which we can be saved. With this name there is comfort in the name of God; without it none at all.
3. That at the name of Jesus, etc. God, though He have so exalted it, yet reckons it not exalted until we exalt it too. So we are to esteem it above every name, and to show our esteem by bowing with the knee and confessing with the tongue.
(1) These are outward acts: so the exalting of the soul is not enough. Our body is to afford her part, and not the upper parts, the tongue in the head, but also the lower, the knee in the leg.
(2) Every knee–
(a) Shall bow, for what better way to exalt Him than by our humility, who for His humility was exalted. This honour is awarded Christ for the death of the Cross; shall we, then, rob Him of it? And He will not have us worship Him like elephants, as if we had no joints in our knees; He will have more honour of men than of pillars in the Church.
(b) Bow to His name. His person is out of sight, but His name is left behind that we may do reverence to it. But why to this name rather than to that of Christ? Christ cannot be the name of God, for God cannot be anointed. Christ was anointed that He might be Jesus–Saviour. But it is not to the syllables of the name that we are to bow. The name is not the sound but the sense–Him who is named. Of course a superstitious use has been made of this act; so there has of hearing sermons. Shall we therefore abandon hearing as well as kneeling? No! Remove the superstition and retain both. It is well to drive away superstition, but it will be well not to drive away reverence with it.
(3) He farther requires somewhat from the tongue. And reason: that member of all others is our glory (Psa 57:8), our peculiarity above the beasts; they will be taught to bow, we have tongues to do something more than they. Besides the knee is only dumb acknowledgment, but a vocal confession utters our mind plainly, and this He calls . Three things are in it. we must say somewhat; , do it together, not some speak and others keep mute; , speak out, not whisper. And it was the praise of the primitive Church that they did it jointly and aloud; that their Amen, as Jerome saith, was like a clap of thunder, and their Hallelujah as the roaring of the sea.
(b) Why the knee first–because we thereby put ourselves in mind of due regard to Him in reverence, and are therefore the fitter to speak of and to Him with respect.
(c) Every knee and tongue. They in heaven cast down their crowns and fall down and confess Him singing (Rev 4:10); they under the earth are thrown down and made His footstool (Psa 110:1); they on earth, as in the midst, partake of both. The better sort get to their knees gladly, and cheerfully confess Him. Infidels and Christians little better are forced to fall backward, and in the end to cry Vicisti Galilaee, though they guard their tongues when they have done.
(d) See our lot. Exalted He shall be with our wills or without them. Either fall on our knees now, or be cast on our faces then; either confess Him with saints and angels, or with devils and damned spirits.
(e) Every tongue shall do this, i.e., every speech and dialect in the world. Where are they, then, who deny any tongue the faculty here granted, or bar any of them the duty here enjoined, that lock up the public confession in some one tongue or two?
4. But though thus many tongues, one confession that Jesus Christ is Lord.
(1) Lord whereof? (Mat 16:19; Rev 3:7; Rev 1:18; Rev 20:2-3).
(2) No man can confess this but by the Holy Ghost.
(3) Confess what? that Jesus is a Lord to save (Mat 14:30), and a Lord to serve (Act 9:6). The first we like well, but the latter not so (Luk 6:46).
5. To the glory of the Father, whose great glory it is that His Son is Lord of such servants, that men shall say, see what servants He hath. How full of reverence to His name! How free and forward to do His will. (Bishop Andrewes.)
Humility
The flower of humility fills the air with perfume, but its leaves lie hidden in the shade. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
Christs obedience unto death
His was no mere resignation, for that is the attitude of the soul toward the inevitable, h creature may risk his life, indeed, provided the aim be a true and noble one; but no right is his to throw it away. He is, on the contrary, bound to conserve it, if he car, do so without the sacrifice of higher interests. But Christ Jesus in His perfect obedience died, because He so willed, and when and as He willed. There stands in a Strasburg church a monument suggestive in its sculptured group. It is the figure of a warrior before an open grave. Death at his side is touching him with his inevitable dart, and he is represented as descending with manly step, but saddened brow, into the sepulchre yawning at his feet. Thus is depicted the lot of our common humanity. It is appointed unto men once to die, and when death comes, he comes resistlessly. Thus are depicted, further, the noble submission and fortitude with which the brave man, brave because he is good, meets death. But with the Captain of our salvation it was far otherwise. He had His life either to give or to keep. He gave His life with all its preciousness, a freewill offering, a priceless sacrifice of a sweet-smelling savour unto God. (J. Hutchinson, D. D.)
Obedient unto death
During the wars of the first Napoleon, in a naval engagement, the son of the captain of a vessel was placed by his father at a certain post and charged to keep it till his return. The captain was killed, and his vessel given over to the enemy. The boys position became dangerous, and he was urged to quit it. No, said he, my father told me to stay till he came back. And so listening in vain for the voice which alone he would obey, he perished in the explosion of the ship. (W. Harris.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 7. But made himself of no reputation] . He emptied himself – did not appear in his glory, for he assumed the form of a servant, being made in the likeness of man. And his being made in the likeness of man, and assuming the form of a servant, was a proof that he had emptied himself – laid aside the effulgence of his glory.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
But; some expound this particle as a discretive, others an adversative, or redditive.
Made himself of no reputation; i.e. most wittingly emptied himself, or abated himself, of the all fulness of glory he had equally with God the Father, that, considering the disproportion between the creature and the Creator, he, in the eyes of those amongst whom he tabernacled, appeared to have nothing of reputation left him, Dan 9:26. It is not said the form of God was cut off, or did empty itself; but he who did suffer in the form of God, made himself of no account, did empty, abate, or abase himself, (so the apostle elsewhere actively and passively useth the word, 1Co 11:15, with 2Co 9:3), and that indeed while subsisting in the form of God, (according to agreement, Zec 6:15; 13:7), not by laying aside the nature of God, but in some other way, i.e. his own way, kept secret till he was pleased to manifest it, Rom 16:25; Col 1:26; by freely coming in the flesh, 1Ti 3:16; Heb 10:7; which is such an astonishing wonder, and mysterious abasement, as gains the greatest veneration from his saints. Thus for a little time laying aside, at his own pleasure withdrawing, and going aside from his glorious majesty, he lessened himself for the salvation of his people. He had a liberty not to show his majesty, fulness, and glory during his pleasure, so that he could (as to our eyes) contract and shadow it, Joh 1:14; Col 2:9. His condescension was free, and unconstrained with the consent of his Father, Joh 3:13; so that thongh the Scripture saith: The Most High dwelleth not in temples made with hands, 1Ki 8:27; Isa 66:1; Mar 5:7; Act 7:48, yet the Son of the Highest can, at his own pleasure, show or eclipse his own glorious brightness, abate or let out his fulness, exalt or abase himself in respect of us. However, in his own simple and absolute nature, he be without variableness or shadow of turning, Jam 1:17 being his Fathers equal, and so abides most simple and immutable; yet respectively to his state, and what he had to manage for the redemption of lost man, with regard to the discovery he made of himself in the revelation of his Divine properties, the acknowledgment and celebration of them by the creatures, he emptied himself, not by ceasing to be what he was before, equal with his Father, or laying down the essential form of God, according to which he was equal to God; but by taking
the form of a servant, wherein he was like to men, i.e. assuming something to himself he had not before, viz. the human nature; veiling himself, as the sun is said to be veiled, not in itself but in regard of the intervening cloud, Mat 27:39-45; what could hinder that he should not manifest his excellency now more, then less clearly; men one while acknowledging and praising it, another while neither acknowledging nor praising of it, then again praising of it, yet more sparingly? He, by taking the form of a mean man, might so obscure the dignity of his person, as to the acknowledgment of him to be the Son of God, equal with his Father, that in vouching himself to be so he might be accounted a blasphemer; Joh 10:36; and, during that appearance, not seem to be the Most High; even as a king, by laying aside the tokens of his royalty, and putting on the habit of a merchant, when all the while he ceaseth not to be king, or the highest in his own dominions. Hence the Most High may be considered, either in regard of his nature, wherein he holdeth the highest degree of perfection, or in regard of those personal acts he performs in the business of our salvation. In the former, Christ is the Most High; in the latter, our Mediator. So the form of God was the term from which, and the form of a servant the term to which, he moved in his demission, or abasement; which did not simply lie in an assumption or union of the human nature to the Divine, for this doth abide still in Christ highly exalted, but in taking the form of a servant, which with the human nature he took, by being sent forth, made of a woman, under the law, Gal 4:4, but by his resurrection and glorification, lest that relation or habit of a servant, (being such a one who was also a Son, and a Lord, Heb 1:2, with Heb 3:6), when yet he retains the human nature still. As therefore he was of the seed of David according to the flesh, Rom 1:3, though before he had not flesh; so he took the form of a servant in the likeness of man, according to his human nature, although before he took that form he could not have human nature: he did not annihilate any thing he was before, only, of his own accord, bowed down himself, and veiled his own glory, in taking our nature, therein to be a servant unto death.
And took upon him the form of a servant; taking, (in the Greek, without any copulative and before it), in opposition to being, or subsisting; he was in the form of God, which he had before, and took this, which he had not then, into the unity of his subsistence, by a personal union, Heb 2:16. He was the servant of God, Isa 42:1; Mat 20:28, in the whole work of his condescension, which was gradual, else the apostles art to engage the Philippians to condescension had not been cogent from Christs example. For:
1. He being increate, did assume to himself a created (not angelical, but) human nature with no reputation, in that regard taking the form of a servant, wherein he was like a man, as the next clause explains this. It was an infinite, inconceivable condescension of the Son of God, to take our nature into union with himself, whereby he who was very God, in all things like unto his Father, became like unto us in all things, sin only excepted, Rom 8:3; Heb 2:17. Hence:
2. He did not immediately advance the nature he took into glory, but became a servant in it to his Father, to perform the most difficult service that ever God had to do in the world; he was not only
in the likeness of sinful flesh, as soon as a man, Rom 8:3, of the seed of Abraham, Heb 2:11-16; but subject to the law, Luk 2:42,51; Ga 4:4, in a mean condition from his birth, despicable in the judgment of the world, his mother poor, &c., Isa 53:2,3; Mt 2:14; 8:20; 13:55; Mar 6:3; Luk 2:7,22,24; 22:27; so that in finishing his work he was exposed to scorn, Psa 22:6,7; Isa 53:1,2; however, all the relation of his service was to God the Father, as his antecedent correlate.
To the further clearing of what went before, the apostle adds, in the likeness, or habit, of men, without any copulative particle, by apposition for fuller explication, (compare forecited parallel places), connoting his employment, (rather than condition), having a true body and a reasonable soul for this purpose, according to the prophecy, to be servant to his Father, Isa 42:1. And if the adversaries say: He only took on him the form of a servant, when he suffered himself to be beaten, &c.; it is easily answered: These were only consequents upon the form of a servant; one may be a servant, and yet not beaten; and when they so treated our Saviour, he acconnted it dealing with him as a malefactor, Luk 22:52. Christ obeyed not men, but God the Father, to whom alone he was servant, when made man, Psa 40:6-8. It is the nature of lord and servant, to relate to each other. Every servant is a man (brutes are not servants). Labouring in service accompanies the human nature, which is common to Christ with other men, on whom it crept by the fall: Christ regards none others will but the will of his Father, how hard soever it was, even to the laying down of his life for the reconciling of his church to him. And be sure he died as a man, and not only in the habit of a servant. Only in human nature could he (as it follows without a particle in the Greek) be made like unto men, or in the likeness and habit of men. The Hellenists do use words of similitude, when they design sameness, or the thing itself, and that indeed essentially. For however it be urged, that likeness be opposed to the same, and that which is true, Joh 9:9, yet not always; as one egg is like to another, there is convenience in quality, and that in substance is included. Christ is like to other men in human properties, and an afflicted state, so that sameness of nature cannot be denied, Rom 8:3; Heb 2:16,17; or rather sameness of kind, though not of number, it being by a synecdoche to be understood generally, Gen 1:3; Mat 1:16; Joh 1:14; Heb 4:15; 1Jo 1:1; 1Jo 4:2,3. The properties of human nature are of the essence he took, who was found in habit as a man, when yet he was separate from sinners, 2Co 5:21, with Heb 7:26; yet the apostles business here, is not of Christs sinlessness in that condition, but of his condescending love, in taking on him that condition, being sent in the likeness of sinful flesh, yet without sin. It is a likeness of nature to all men, and not a likeness of innocency only to the first, Gen 5:1, that Paul here speaks of: And as it is said, Joh 1:14; The Word was made flesh; so here, Christ is made in the likeness of men, that we may understand it is the same numerical person, who was in the form of God, that was made man; the abasement of God-man being so great, that he was made like to man, i.e. to mere and bare man, though he was more. Nor only did he appear in many forms, (as might be under the Old Testament), or was joined to man, but personally assumed a true body and a reasonable soul, and so was very man, as well as very God. For when it is not said simply made man, but with that addition, in the likeness, it is done to a notable limitation of his station on each part; on Gods part it imports, Christ did not lay aside the Divine nature, but only (veiled) his majesty and power; on mans, to exclude sin, viz. that he was true man, yet only like to all other men. But what is now the natural affection of all men from the fall of Adam, and is an infirmity and abatement, as to that, he was without sin, and only in the likeness of sinful flesh.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
7. made himself of no reputation,and . . . andrather as the Greek, “emptiedHimself, taking upon him the form of a servant, beingmade in the likeness of men.” The two latter clauses (therebeing no conjunctions, “and . . . and,” in the Greek)expresses in what Christ’s “emptying of Himself”consists, namely, in “taking the form of a servant” (see onHeb 10:5; compare Exo 21:5;Exo 21:6; Psa 40:6,proving that it was at the time when He assumed a body, Hetook “the form of a servant“), and in order toexplain how He took “the form of a servant,” thereis added, by “being made in the likeness of men.” Hissubjection to the law (Luk 2:21;Gal 4:4) and to His parents (Lu2:51), His low state as a carpenter, and carpenter’s reputed son(Mat 13:55; Mar 6:3),His betrayal for the price of a bond-servant (Ex21:32), and slave-like death to relieve us from the slavery ofsin and death, finally and chiefly, His servant-like dependence asman on God, while His divinity was not outwardly manifested(Isa 49:3; Isa 49:7),are all marks of His “form as a servant.” This proves: (1)He was in the form of a servant as soon as He was made man. (2) Hewas “in the form of God” before He was “in theform of a servant.” (3) He did as really subsist in the divinenature, as in the form of a servant, or in the nature of man. For Hewas as much “in the form of God” as “in the form of aservant”; and was so in the form of God as “to be on anequality with God”; He therefore could have been none other thanGod; for God saith, “To whom will ye liken Me and make Meequal?” (Isa 46:5),[BISHOP PEARSON].His emptying Himself presupposes His previous plenitude ofGodhead (Joh 1:14; Col 1:19;Col 2:9). He remained full ofthis; yet He bore Himself as if He were empty.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
But made himself of no reputation,…. Or “nevertheless emptied himself”; not of that fulness of grace which was laid up in him from everlasting, for with this he appeared when he was made flesh, and dwelt among men; nor of the perfections of his divine nature, which were not in the least diminished by his assumption of human nature, for all the fulness of the Godhead dwelt in him bodily; though he took that which he had not before, he lost nothing of what he had; the glory of his divine nature was covered, and out of sight; and though some rays and beams of it broke out through his works and miracles, yet his glory, as the only begotten of the Father, was beheld only by a few; the minds of the far greater part were blinded, and their hearts hardened, and they saw no form nor comeliness in him to desire him; the form of God in which he was, was hid from them; they reputed him as a mere man, yea, as a sinful man, even as a worm, and no man: and to be thus esteemed, and had in such account, he voluntarily subjected himself, though infinitely great and glorious; as he did not assume deity by rapine, he was not thrust down into this low estate by force; as the angels that sinned when they affected to be as God, were drove from their seats of glory, and cast down into hell; and when man, through the instigation of Satan, was desirous of the same, he was turned out of Eden, and became like the beasts that perish; but this was Christ’s own act and deed, he willingly assented to it, to lay aside as it were his glory for a while, to have it veiled and hid, and be reckoned anything, a mere man, yea, to have a devil, and not be God: O wondrous humility! astonishing condescension!
and took upon him the form of a servant; this also was voluntary; he “took upon him”, was not obliged, or forced to be in the form of a servant; he appeared as one in human nature, and was really such; a servant to his Father, who chose, called, sent, upheld, and regarded him as a servant; and a very prudent, diligent, and faithful one he was unto him: and he was also a servant to his people, and ministered to men; partly by preaching the Gospel to them, and partly by working miracles, healing their diseases, and going about to do good, both to the bodies and souls of men; and chiefly by obtaining eternal redemption for his chosen ones, by being made sin and a curse for them; which though a very toilsome and laborious piece of service, yet as he cheerfully engaged in it, he diligently attended it, until he had finished it: so he was often prophesied of as a servant, in Isa 42:1, in which several places he is called in the Targum, , “my servant the Messiah”: put these two together, “the form of God”, and “the form of a servant”, and admire the amazing stoop!
and was made in the likeness of men; not of the first Adam, for though, as he, he was without sin, knew none, nor did any; yet he was rather like to sinful men, and was sent in the likeness of sinful flesh, and was traduced and treated as a sinner, and numbered among transgressors; he was like to men, the most mean and abject, such as were poor, and in lower life, and were of the least esteem and account among men, on any score: or he was like to men in common, and particularly to his brethren the seed of Abraham, and children of God that were given him; he partook of the same flesh and blood, he had a true body, and a reasonable soul, as they; he was subject to the like sorrows and griefs, temptations, reproaches, and persecutions; and was like them in everything, excepting sin: a strange and surprising difference this, that he who was “equal to God”, should be “like to [sinful] men!”
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
The form of a servant ( ). He took the characteristic attributes ( as in verse 6) of a slave. His humanity was as real as his deity.
In the likeness of men ( ). It was a likeness, but a real likeness (Kennedy), no mere phantom humanity as the Docetic Gnostics held. Note the difference in tense between (eternal existence in the of God) and (second aorist middle participle of , becoming, definite entrance in time upon his humanity).
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Made Himself of no reputation [ ] . 179 Lit., emptied Himself. The general sense is that He divested Himself of that peculiar mode of existence which was proper and peculiar to Him as one with God. He laid aside the form of God. In so doing, He did not divest Himself of His divine nature. The change was a change of state : the form of a servant for the form of God. His personality continued the same. His self – emptying was not self – extinction, nor was the divine Being changed into a mere man. In His humanity He retained the consciousness of deity, and in His incarnate state carried out the mind which animated Him before His incarnation. He was not unable to assert equality with God. He was able not to assert it.
Form of a servant [ ] . The same word for form as in the phrase form of God, and with the same sense. The mode of expression of a slave ‘s being is indeed apprehensible, and is associated with human shape, but it is not this side of the fact which Paul is developing. It is that Christ assumed that mode of being which answered to, and was the complete and characteristic expression of, the slave ‘s being. The mode itself is not defined. This is appropriately inserted here as bringing out the contrast with counted not equality with God, etc. What Christ grasped at in His incarnation was not divine sovereignty, but service.
Was made in the likeness of men [ ] . Lit., becoming in, etc. Notice the choice of the verb, not was, but became : entered into a new state. Likeness. The word does not imply the reality of our Lord ‘s humanity, morfh form implied the reality of His deity. That fact is stated in the form of a servant. Neither is eijkwn image employed, which, for our purposes, implies substantially the same as morfh. See on Col 1:15. As form of a servant exhibits the inmost reality of Christ ‘s condition as a servant – that He became really and essentially the servant of men (Luk 22:27) – so likeness of men expresses the fact that His mode of manifestation resembled what men are. This leaves room for the assumption of another side of His nature – the divine – in the likeness of which He did not appear. As He appealed to men, He was like themselves, with a real likeness; but this likeness to men did not express His whole self. The totality of His being could not appear to men, for that involved the form of God. Hence the apostle views Him solely as He could appear to men. All that was possible was a real and complete likeness to humanity. What He was essentially and eternally could not enter into His human mode of existence. Humanly He was like men, but regarded with reference to His whole self, He was not identical with man, because there was an element of His personality which did not dwell in them – equality with God. Hence the statement of His human manifestation is necessarily limited by this fact, and is confined to likeness and does not extend to identity. “To affirm likeness is at once to assert similarity and to deny sameness” (Dickson). See on Rom 8:3.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “But made himself of no reputation” (alla heauton ekenosen) But emptied himself,” self-effacing, condescension, unselfishness are here ascribed to Christ in His voluntary earthly birth and life, an example of practical ethical conduct for every believer in and professor of Christ, Isa 53:2-3; Mar 8:34.
2) ” And took upon him the form of a servant” (morphen doulou labon) “Taking the form of a slave-servant.” He was born not in the palace of a king or of royalty, but in the stable of an unclean donkey, laid in a manger, wrapped in swaddling clothes, that He might be the Redeemer and servant of God and man, Luk 22:27; Joh 6:38.
3) “And was made in’ the likeness of men” (en homoiomati anthropon genomenos) “Becoming in likeness of men.” He was really like man, was man, and other than, more than man, Heb 2:14; Heb 2:17; Heb 4:15. See also Psa 8:4-6.
Let it be noted that this little book of Philippians reveals Jesus Christ as the believer’s:
a) Life
b) Mind
c) Goal
d) Strength
In each area the faithful believer and church member is to emulate Him.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
7 Emptied himself. This emptying is the same as the abasement, as to which we shall see afterwards. The expression, however, is used, ευμφατικωτέρως, ( more emphatically,) to mean, — being brought to nothing. Christ, indeed, could not divest himself of Godhead; but he kept it concealed for a time, that it might not be seen, under the weakness of the flesh. Hence he laid aside his glory in the view of men, not by lessening it, but by concealing it.
It is asked, whether he did this as man? Erasmus answers in the affirmative. But where was the form of God before he became man? Hence we must reply, that Paul speaks of Christ wholly, as he was God manifested in the flesh, (1Ti 3:16😉 but, nevertheless, this emptying is applicable exclusive to his humanity, as if I should say of man, “Man being mortal, he is exceedingly senseless if he thinks of nothing but the world,” I refer indeed to man wholly; but at the same time I ascribe mortality only to a part of him, namely, to the body. As, then, Christ has one person, consisting of two natures, it is with propriety that Paul says, that he who was the Son of God, — in reality equal to God, did nevertheless lay aside his glory, when he in the flesh manifested himself in the appearance of a servant.
It is also asked, secondly, how he can be said to be emptied, while he, nevertheless, invariably proved himself, by miracles and excellences, to be the Son of God, and in whom, as John testifies, there was always to be seen a glory worthy of the Son of God? (Joh 1:14.) I answer, that the abasement of the flesh was, notwithstanding, like a vail, by which his divine majesty was concealed. On this account he did not wish that his transfiguration should be made public until after his resurrection; and when he perceives that the hour of his death is approaching, he then says, Father, glorify thy Son. (Joh 17:1.) Hence, too, Paul teaches elsewhere, that he was declared to be the Son of God by means of his resurrection. (Rom 1:4.) He also declares in another place, (2Co 13:4,) that he suffered through the weakness of the flesh. In fine, the image of God shone forth in Christ in such a manner, that he was, at the same time, abased in his outward appearance, and brought down to nothing in the estimation of men; for he carried about with him the form of a servant, and had assumed our nature, expressly with the view of his being a servant of the Father, nay, even of men. Paul, too, calls him the Minister of the Circumcision, (Rom 15:8😉 and he himself testifies of himself, that he came to minister, (Mat 20:28😉 and that same thing had long before been foretold by Isaiah — Behold my servant, etc. (108)
In the likeness of men Γενόμενος is equivalent here to constitutus — ( having been appointed.) For Paul means that he had been brought down to the level of mankind, so that there was in appearance nothing that differed from the common condition of mankind. The Marcionites perverted this declaration for the purpose of establishing the phantasm of which they dreamed. They can, however, be refuted without any great difficulty, inasmuch as Paul is treating here simply of the manner in which Christ manifested himself, and the condition with which he was conversant when in the world. Let one be truly man, he will nevertheless be reckoned unlike others, if he conducts himself as if he were exempt from the condition of others. Paul declares that it was not so as to Christ, but that he lived in such a manner, that he seemed as though he were on a level with mankind, and yet he was very different from a mere man, although he was truly man. The Marcionites therefore shewed excessive childishness, in drawing an argument from similarity of condition for the purpose of denying reality of nature. (109)
Found means here, known or seen. For he treats, as has been observed, of estimation. In other words, as he had affirmed previously that he was truly God, the equal of the Father, so he here states, that he was reckoned, as it were, abject, and in the common condition of mankind. We must always keep in view what I said a little ago, that such abasement was voluntary.
(108) Isa 42:1, — fj.
(109) See Calvin’s Institutes, vol. 2:13-15.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(7) But made himself . . .This verse needs more exact translation. It should be, But emptied (or, stripped) Himself of His glory by having taken on Him the form of a slave and having been made (or, born) in likeness of men. The glory is the glory which He had with the Father before the world was (Joh. 17:5; comp. Php. 1:14), clearly corresponding to the Shechinah of the Divine Presence. Of this He stripped Himself in the Incarnation, taking on Him the form (or, nature) of a servant of God. He resumed it for a moment in the Transfiguration; He was crowned with it anew at the Ascension.
Made in the likeness of man.This clause, at first sight, seems to weaken the previous clause, for it does not distinctly express our Lords true humanity. But we note that the phrase is the likeness of men, i.e., of men in general, men as they actually are. Hence the key to the meaning is to be found in such passages as Rom. 8:3, God sent His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh; or Heb. 2:17; Heb. 4:15, It behoved Him to be made like unto His brethren, in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin. It would have been an infinite humiliation to have assumed humanity, even in unique and visible glory; but our Lord went beyond this, by deigning to seem like other men in all things, one only of the multitude, and that, too, in a station, which confused Him with the commoner types of mankind. The truth of His humanity is expressed in the phrase form of a servant; its unique and ideal character is glanced at when it is said to have worn only the likeness of men.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
Php 2:7. But made himself of no reputation, &c. “Nevertheless ( ) he was pleased, by a most wonderful act of condescension, so far to disrobe, and, as it were empty himself, of the bright appearances of his divine majesty and glory, as not to make a pompous shew of them, but, in great measure, to conceal them from the observation of men; while, in themselves, they continued to be really and essentially the same as ever, and all the fullness of the Godhead dwelt substantially in him (Col 2:9.): and he voluntarily assumed the human nature into personal union with himself, in so low and mean a condition, as therein to become his Father’s servant, living and acting, bleeding and dying, according to his commandment (Joh 10:18.), and as even to act the part of a servant towards his disciples (Luk 12:37.), and go through the most painful, humbling, and difficult servicesfor the salvation of the faithful.”The form of a servant, in this verse, is plainly opposed to the form of God. If therefore we can come at the determinate meaning of either of these expressions, it will certainly lead to the knowledge of the other. The true way to explain this place may be found in Heb 1:1-14. The image which the writer seems to have before him is that of a great household. Christ is considered as the Son, the eternal Son of the everlasting Father, and heir of all things: other beings are the servants and attendants belonging to the family. Under this view, it is not hard to know what the Apostle means in the passage before us, when he says Christ took upon him the form of a servant. He was truly the Son of the family, the Heir of all things, and possessed the complete form and majesty of his Father; but he in some sense descended from the glories of his Father, and became like one of the family, submitting to take the form and character of a servant upon him, by assuming the human nature, and uniting it to his divine. The Apostle adds, being made in the likeness of men: the reason and meaning of this addition the Apostle will likewise teach us, Heb 2:16. Verily he took not on him the nature of angels, &c. Angels are servants as well as men; therefore by saying Christ took on him the form of a servant, there might be room to suppose him to have taken the nature of angels: to shew therefore what nature he took, the Apostle says, he took the form of a servant in the likeness of men; that is, in the nature of man. So then, the form of a servant is a common mark and character of all the creatures of God; the likeness here spoken of is the peculiar and proper character of each species. So that the form of a servant, and the likeness of a man, make a complete and perfect man. He was not only a man in appearance and likeness, but in reality, having the same common nature, distinguished by the same specific differences, but united to his own eternally divine nature.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Phi 2:7 . ] The emphatically prefixed is correlative to the likewise emphatic in Phi 2:6 . Instead of the , by which he would have entered upon a foreign domain, He has, on the contrary, emptied Himself , and that, as the context places beyond doubt, of the divine , which He possessed but now exchanged for a ; He renounced the divine glorious form which, prior to His incarnation, was the form of appearance of His God-equal existence, took instead of it the form of a servant, and became as a man. Those who have already taken Phi 2:6 as referring to the incarnate Christ (see on , Phi 2:6 ) are at once placed in a difficulty by , and explain away its simple and distinct literal meaning; as, for instance, Calvin: “ supprimendo deposuit;” Calovius (comp. Form. Conc . pp. 608, 767): “ veluti (?) deposuit, quatenus eam (gloriam div.) non perpetuo manifestavit atque exseruit; ” Clericus: “non magis ea usus est, quam si ea destitutus fuisset;” comp. Quenstedt, Bos, Wolf, Bengel, Rheinwald, and many others. Beyschlag also finds expressed here merely the idea of the self-denial exercised on principle by Christ in His earthly life, consequently substituting the N. T. idea of . De Wette, in accordance with his distinction between and (comp. Schneckenburger, p. 336), referring it only to the latter (so also Corn. Mller, Philippi, Beyschlag, and others), would have this meant merely in so far as it would have stood in Jesus’ power , not in so far as He actually possessed it, so that the . . amounts only to a renunciation of the , which He might have appropriated to Himself; while others , like Grotius, alter the signification of itself, some making it mean: He led a life of poverty (Grotius, Baumgarten-Crusius), and others: depressit (van Hengel, Corn. Mller, following Tittmann, Opusc . p. 642 f., Keil, comp. Chrysostom, Theodoret, and others). Augustine: “Non amittens quod erat, sed accipiens quod non erat; forma servi accessit , non forma Dei discessit .” But means nothing but exinanivit (Vulgate) (see Rom 4:14 ; 1Co 1:17 ; 1Co 9:15 ; 2Co 9:3 ; and the passages in the LXX. cited by Schleusner; Plat. Conv . p. 197 C, Rep . p. 560 D, Phil . p. 35 E; Soph. O. R . 29; Eur. Rhes . 914; Thuc. viii. 57. 1; Xen. Oec . 8. 7), [111] and is here purposely selected , because it corresponds with the idea of the (Phi 2:6 ) all the more, that the latter also falls under the conception of (as emptying of that which is affected by the ; comp. LXX. Jer 15:9 ; Plat. Rep . p. 560 D; Sir 13:5 ; Sir 13:7 ). The specific reference of the meaning to making poor (Grotius) must have been suggested by the context (comp. 2Co 8:9 ; Ecclus. l.c. ), as if some such expression as . had been previously used. Figuratively , the renunciation of the divine might have been described as a putting it off ( ).
The more precise , positive definition of the mode in which He emptied Himself, is supplied by , and the latter then receives through . . . . . its specification of mode, correlative to . This specification is not co-ordinate (de Wette, Baumgarten-Crusius, Weiss, Schenkel), but subordinate to . , hence no connecting particle is placed before . , and no punctuation is to be placed before , but a new topic is to be entered upon with in Phi 2:8 (comp. Luther). The division, by which a stop is placed before , and these words are joined to . . . (Castalio, Beza, Bengel, and others; including Hoelemann, Rilliet, van Hengel, Lachmann, Wiesinger, Ewald, Rich. Schmidt, J. B. Lightfoot, Grimm), is at variance with the purposely-chosen expressions and , both of which correspond to the idea of , and thereby show that . . . . is still a portion of the modal definition of . Nor is the . . . something following the (Grimm), but the empirical appearance, which was an integral part of the manner in which the act of self-emptying was completed. Besides, has its own more precise definition following; hence by the proposed connection the symmetry of structure in the two statements, governed respectively by and , would be unnecessarily disturbed. This applies also in opposition to Hofmann, who (comp. Grotius) even connects . . with , whereby no less than three participial definitions are heaped upon the latter. And when Hofmann discovers in . . . a second half of the relative sentence attached to , it is at variance with the fact, that Paul does not by the intervention of a particle (or by , or even by the bare ) supply any warrant for such a division, which is made, therefore, abruptly and arbitrarily, simply to support the scheme of thought which Hofmann groundlessly assumes: (1) that Jesus, when He was in the divine , emptied Himself; and (2) when He had become man, humbled Himself. Comp. in opposition to this, Grimm, p. 46, and Kolbe in the Luther. Zeitschr . 1873, p. 314.
] so that He took slave-form , now making this lowly form of existence and condition His own, instead of the divine form, which He had hitherto possessed. How this was done, is stated in the sequel. The aorist participle denotes, not what was previous to the . ., but what was contemporaneous with it. See on Eph 1:9 . So also do the two following participles, which are, however, subordinated to the , as definitions of manner. That Paul, in the word , thought not of the relation of one serving in general (with reference to God and men, Matthies, Rheinwald, Rilliet, de Wette, comp. Calvin and others), or that of a servant of others , as in Mat 20:28 (Schneckenburger, Beyschlag, Christol . p. 236, following Luther and others), or, indefinitely, that of one subject to the will of another (Hofmann), but of a slave of God (comp. Act 3:13 ; Isa 52 ), as is self-evident from the relation to God described in Phi 2:6 , is plain, partly from the fact that subsequently the assumption of the slave-form is more precisely defined by . . . (which, regarded in itself, puts Jesus only on the same line with men , but in the relation of service towards God ), and partly from in Phi 2:8 . To generalize the definite expression, and one which corresponds so well to the connection, into “ miseram sortem, qualis esse servorum solet ” (Heinrichs, comp. Hoelemann; and already, Beza, Piscator, Calovius, Wolf, Wetstein, and others), is pure caprice, which Erasmus, following Ambrosiaster (comp. Beyschlag, 1860, p. 471), carries further by the arbitrary paraphrase: “servi nocentis , cum ipsa esset innocentia,” comp. Rom 8:3 .
. . . . . .] the manner of this . : so that He came in the likeness of man , that is, so that He entered into a form of existence, which was not different from that which men have . In opposition to Hofmann, who connects . . . with . . . , see above. On , in the sense, to come into a position, into a state , comp. 2Co 3:7 ; 1Ti 2:14 ; Luk 22:44 ; Act 22:17 ; 1Ma 1:27 ; 2Ma 7:9 ; Sir 44:20 ; and frequently in Greek authors after Homer (Xen. Anab . i. 9. 1; Herodian, iii. 7. 19, ii. 13. 21); see Ngelsbach, zur Ilias , p. 295 f. Exo 3 . This entrance into an existence like that of men was certainly brought about by human birth; still it would not be appropriate to explain . by natus (Gal 4:4 ; Rilliet; comp. Gess, p. 295; Lechler, p. 66), or as an expression for the “ beginning of existence ” (Hofmann), since this fact, in connection with which the miraculous conception is, notwithstanding Rom 1:3 , also thought to be included , was really human, as it is also described in Gal 4:4 . Paul justly says: ., because, in fact, Christ, although certainly perfect man ( Rom 5:15 ; 1Co 15:21 ; 1Ti 2:5 ), was, by reason of the divine nature (the ) present in Him, not simply and merely man, not a purus putus homo , but the incarnate Son of God (comp. Rom 1:3 ; Gal 4:4 ; and the Johannine ), (1Ti 3:16 ), so that the power of the higher divine nature was united in Him with the human appearance, which was not the case in other men. The nature of Him who had become man was, so far, not fully identical with, but substantially conform ( .) to, that which belongs to man. [112] Comp. on Rom 8:3 ; Rom 1:3 f., and respecting the idea of , which does not convey merely the conception of analogy , see on Rom 1:23 ; Rom 5:14 ; Rom 6:5 ; Rom 8:3 . The expression is based, not upon the conception of a quasi-man , but upon the fact that in the man Jesus Christ (Rom 5:15 ) there was the superhuman life-basis of divine , the not indwelling in other men. Justice, however, is not done to the intentionally used (comp. afterwards ), if, with de Wette, we find merely the sense that He (not appearing as divine Ruler) was found in a human condition , a consequence of the fact that even Phi 2:6 was referred to the time after the incarnation. This drove also the ancient dogmatic expositors to adopt the gloss, which is here out of place, that Christ assumed the accidentales infirmitates corporis (yet without sin), not ex naturae necessitate , but ex libertate (Calovius). [113] By others, the characteristic of debile et abjectum (Hoelemann, following older expositors) is obtruded upon the word , which is here to be taken in a purely generic sense; while Grotius understood . as referring to the first human beings, and believed that the sinlessness of Jesus was meant. It is not at all specially this (in opposition also to Castalio, Lnemann, Schenkel, and others), but the whole divine nature of Jesus, the of which He laid aside at His incarnation, which constitutes the point of difference that lies at the bottom of the expression ( , Theophylact, comp. Chrysostom), and gives to it the definite reference of its meaning. The explanation of the expression by the unique position of Christ as the second Adam (Weiss) is alien from the context, which presents to us the relation, not of the second man to the first man, but of the God-man to ordinary humanity.
. . .] to be closely connected with the preceding participial affirmation, the thought of which is emphatically exhausted: “and in fashion was found as a man, ” so that the divine nature (the Logos-nature) was not perceived in Him. , habitus , which receives its more precise reference from the context (Pflugk, ad Eur. Hec . 619), denotes here the entire outwardly perceptible mode and form, the whole shape of the phenomenon apparent to the senses, 1Co 7:31 ; comp. . , Plat. Crit . p. 110 B; , Soph. Ant . 1154; Eur. Med . 1039; Plat. Polit . p. 267 C: , p. 290 D: ; Dem . 690. 21: ; Lucian, Cyn . 17: ; also, in the plural, Xen. Mem . iii. 10. 7; Lucian, D. M . xx. 5. Men saw in Christ a human form, bearing, language, action, mode of life, wants and their satisfaction, etc., in general the state and relations of a human being, so that in the entire mode of His appearance He made Himself known and was recognised ( .) as a man . In His external character, after He had laid aside the divine form which He had previously had, [114] there was observed no difference between His appearance and that of a man , although the subject of His appearance was at the same time essentially divine . The with . does not simply indicate what He was recognised to be (Weiss); this would have been expressed by . alone; but He was found as a man, not invested with other qualities . The Vulgate well renders it, “inventus ut homo.” This included, in particular, that He presented and manifested in Himself the human , human weakness and susceptibility of death (2Co 13:4 ; Rom 6:9 ; Act 26:23 ).
[111] Comp. Hasse in the Jahrb. f. Deutsche Theol . 1858, p. 394 f. (in opposition to Dorner’s reference of the idea to that of ). Dorner, in the same Jahrb . 1856, p. 395, is likewise driven to reduce the idea of the merely to that of the renunciation of the appearance of majesty, which would have been befitting the divine form and parity, this inner greatness and dignity of Jesus Christ.
[112] Our passage contains no trace of Docetism , even if Paul had, instead of , used the singular, which he might just as well have written here as in the sequel, in place of which he might also have used . This applies in opposition to Lange, apost. Zeitalt . I. p. 131, and Lechler, p. 66. Even Philippi, Glaubensl . IV. 1, p. 472, is of opinion that the above-named interpretation amounts to Docetism. But Christ was in fact, although perfect man, nevertheless something so much more exalted, that the phrase . . must have vindicated itself to the believing consciousness of the readers without any misconception, and especially without that of Docetism, which Baur introduces into it ( neutest. Theol . p. 269), particularly when we consider the thoroughly ethical occasion and basis of the passage as an exhibition of the loftiest example of humility (comp. Rich. Schmidt, p. 178). Nevertheless, Beyschlag has repeated that objection.
[113] To this also amounts the not so precisely and methodically expressed explanation of Philippi: Since Christ remained in the divine form, His assumption of the slave-form consisted “ in the withdrawal of the rays of the divine glory which continued to dwell in His flesh, and which He only veiled and subdued with the curtain of the flesh. ” Thus also does Calvin depict it: the carnis humilitas was instar veli, quo divina majestas tegebatur .
[114] Comp. Test. XII. Patr . p. 644 f.: . Comp. p. 744: , . How these passages agree with the Nazaraic character of the book, is not a point for discussion here.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
7 But made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men:
Ver. 7. But made himself. &c. ] Gr. , “emptied himself,” suspended and laid aside his glory and majesty, and became a sinner both by imputation (for God made the iniquity of us all to meet upon him, Isa 53:6 ) and by reputation, for he was reckoned not only among men, but among malefactors, Phi 2:9 . Hence he is said to be sent in the likeness of sinful flesh, Rom 8:3 .
And took upon him the form of a servant ] Yea, of an evil servant, that was to be beaten.
In the likeness of men ] Yea, he was a worm and no man, nullificamen populi, as Tertullian hath it. Christ vilified, nullified himself to the utmost, ex omni seipsum ad nihil redegit, as Beza expounds the former part of this verse, of everything he became nothing.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
7 .] but emptied Himself ( emphatic, not .
, contrast to . he not only did not enrich himself, but he emptied himself: He used His equality with God as an opportunity, not for self-exaltation, but for self-abasement. And the word simply and literally means, ‘ exinanivit ’ (vulg.) as above. He emptied Himself of the (not His essential glory, but its manifested possession: see on the words above: the glory which He had with the Father before the world began, Joh 17:5 , and which He resumed at His glorification) He ceased, while in this state of exinanition, to reflect the glory which He had with the Father. Those who understand above of the incarnate Saviour, are obliged to explain away this powerful word: thus Calv., ‘ inanitio hc eadem est cum humiliatione de qua postea videbimus :’ Calov., ‘ veluti deposuit :’ Le Clerc, ‘ non magis ea usus est, quam si ea destitutus fuisset :’ De W., ‘the manner and form of the is given by the three following participles’ ( , , ): alii aliter) by taking the form of a servant (specification of the method in which He emptied Himself: not co-ordinate with (as De W., al.) but subordinate to .
The participle does not point to that which has preceded . ., but to a simultaneous act, = as in (Plato, Phd. p. 60 D), see Bernhardy, Synt. p. 383, and Harless on Eph 1:13 . And so of below. The is contrasted with ‘equality with God’ and imports ‘ a servant of God ,’ not a servant generally , nor a servant of man and God. And this state, of a servant of God , is further defined by what follows) being made (by birth into the world, ‘ becoming :’ but we must not render the general, , by the particular, ‘ being born ’) in the likeness of men (cf. , Rom 8:3 . He was not a man , purus putus homo (Mey.), but the Son of God manifest in the flesh and nature of men. On the interpretation impugned above, which makes all these clauses refer to acts of Christ, in our nature , this word loses all meaning. But on the right interpretation, it becomes forcible in giving another subordinate specification to viz. that He was made in like form to men , who are ).
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Phi 2:7 . A question arises as to punctuation. W.H. punctuate as in the text. Calvin, Weiffenb. and Haupt would place a comma after . and a colon after of Phi 2:8 . This would coordinate these three clauses and make a new sentence begin with . The division does not seem natural or necessary. . . The clause defines . Christ’s assumption of the “form” of a does not imply that the innermost basis of His personality, His “ego,” was changed, although, indeed, “there was more in this emptying of Himself than we can think or say” (Rainy, op. cit. , p. 119). [1] . simply describes the humility to which He condescended. It is needless to ask whose He became. The question is not before the Apostle. . . . . as opposed to , “becoming” as opposed to “being by nature”. This clause, in turn, defines . . . “Being made in the likeness of men.” . expresses with great accuracy the Apostle’s idea. Christ walked this earth in the real likeness of men. This was no mere phantom, no mere incomplete copy of humanity. And yet Paul feels that it did not express the whole of Christ’s nature. It was not “an hereditary likeness of being” (Hltzm [2] See N.T. Th. , ii., pp. 70 72). It was, in a sense, borrowed. . Almost = “mankind,” “humanity”.
[1] Codex Sangallensis
[2]ltzm. Holtzmann.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
made Himself of no reputation = emptied Himself. Greek. kenoo. See Rom 4:14. Of what He divested Himself is not stated, but Geo. Herbert’s words, “He laid his glory by”, i.e. the outward attributes of Deity, well suggest the meaning here. “It is assumed by some that when taking the form of a bondservant, He not only divested Himself of His Divine powers, but became as His fellows, and limited Himself (or was limited) to the knowledge and “mental status” of the age in which He lived. In support of this Luk 2:52 and Mar 13:32 are adduced, but neither affords any warrant whatever for such assumption. The Lord’s wisdom and knowledge were astonishing to the Rabbis (Luk 2:37). He came only to accomplish the work the Father gave Him to do (Joh 17:4), so He only spoke the words the Father gave Him (Joh 3:34; Joh 7:16; Joh 8:28; Joh 12:49, Joh 12:50; Joh 14:10, Joh 14:24; Joh 17:8, Joh 17:14). His perfect obedience (as far as death, Php 2:8) was shown in that He did and said only what was appointed Him to do and say, not His own will, but the will of Him that sent Him (Heb 10:5-7).
and took, &c. = having taken.
servant. App-190.
was made. Literally becoming.
likeness Greek. homoioma. See Rom 1:23.
men. App-123.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
7.] but emptied Himself ( emphatic,-not .
, contrast to .-he not only did not enrich himself, but he emptied himself:-He used His equality with God as an opportunity, not for self-exaltation, but for self-abasement. And the word simply and literally means, exinanivit (vulg.) as above. He emptied Himself of the (not His essential glory, but its manifested possession: see on the words above: the glory which He had with the Father before the world began, Joh 17:5, and which He resumed at His glorification)-He ceased, while in this state of exinanition, to reflect the glory which He had with the Father. Those who understand above of the incarnate Saviour, are obliged to explain away this powerful word: thus Calv., inanitio hc eadem est cum humiliatione de qua postea videbimus: Calov., veluti deposuit: Le Clerc, non magis ea usus est, quam si ea destitutus fuisset: De W., the manner and form of the is given by the three following participles (, , ): alii aliter) by taking the form of a servant (specification of the method in which He emptied Himself: not co-ordinate with (as De W., al.) but subordinate to .
The participle does not point to that which has preceded . ., but to a simultaneous act, = as in (Plato, Phd. p. 60 D), see Bernhardy, Synt. p. 383, and Harless on Eph 1:13. And so of below. The is contrasted with equality with God-and imports a servant of God,-not a servant generally, nor a servant of man and God. And this state, of a servant of God, is further defined by what follows) being made (by birth into the world,-becoming: but we must not render the general, , by the particular, being born) in the likeness of men (cf. , Rom 8:3. He was not a man, purus putus homo (Mey.), but the Son of God manifest in the flesh and nature of men. On the interpretation impugned above, which makes all these clauses refer to acts of Christ, in our nature, this word loses all meaning. But on the right interpretation, it becomes forcible in giving another subordinate specification to -viz. that He was made in like form to men, who are ).
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Php 2:7. , but) To this word the two clauses refer: He emptied Himself, to which the form of a servant belongs; and He humbled Himself, on which His obedience depends. The former is opposed privatively, the latter also in direct contrariety to being equal with God; wherefore these two words are used in the way of gradation, and He humbled is put before Himself.[18] (Comp. Jam 2:18, note). For, to take an example, when Philip V. ceased to be King of Spain, whose doings were agitating the public mind while we were engaged in these meditations, he so far emptied himself, yet he did not equally humble himself: he laid down the government of a kingdom, but he did not become a subject.- , He emptied Himself) , LXX., , Isa 32:6, where the matter discussed is indeed quite different, but yet Paul, when he uses , translates by it the verb , Psa 8:5, with which comp. Heb 2:7. Wherever there is emptying, there is a thing containing and a thing contained. The thing containing, in the emptying of Christ, is Himself; the thing contained was that fulness, which He received in His exaltation. He remained full, Joh 1:14 : and yet He bore Himself in the same way as if He were empty; for He avoided the observation, so far as it was expedient, of men and angels, nay, even of His own self: Rom 15:3 : and therefore not only avoided observation, but also denied Himself, and abstained from His rights.-, form) These three words, , , ,[19] form, likeness, fashion, are not synonymous, nor even can they be interchanged the one for the other; but yet they are closely related: form signifies something absolute; likeness denotes a relation to other things of the same condition; fashion is to be referred to the sight and sense.-, having taken) The act of emptying carries with it [contains in it] His taking the form of a servant. Moreover He was able to take it, because He was in the likeness of men.- , in the likeness of men) He was made like men, a true man.
[18] (the coming first, because HIMSELF, viewed in respect to what He had heretofore been, is the emphatic word and thought); but (the coming second, and first, because the emphatic word is , which forms a climax to the previous , He not only emptied Himself of what He was and had, but submitted to positive humiliation).-ED.
[19] The word , habitus (Th. habeo., condition, appearance, bearing, has a wider application than , forma. is the similarity itself: the image or likeness according to which anything is conformed: the thing itself so conformed or made like.-ED.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Php 2:7
Php 2:7
but emptied himself.-He emptied himself of all glories, laid aside the honors of his Fathers throne, took upon himself the form of man-the nature of the seed of Abraham, took part of flesh and blood, lived among the lowliest of men, and served in the humble walks of life
taking the form of a servant,-He was not only made in the likeness of men, but partook of their nature, bore their infirmities, took on himself the form and filled the office of a servant. He was servant of all.
being made in the likeness of men;-He was made in the likeness of men in general, men as they actually are. [Hence the key to the meaning is to be found in the following passages: For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God, sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh (Rom 8:3); Wherefore it behooved him in all things to be made like unto his brethren, that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest in things pertaining to God, to make propitiation for the sins of the people (Heb 2:17), and For we have not a high priest that cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities; but one that hath been in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin (Heb 4:15). It would have been an infinite humiliation to have assumed humanity, even in unique and visible glory; but Christ went beyond this, by deigning to seem like other men in all things, one only of the multitude, and that too in the station which confused him with the commoner type of mankind. The truth of his humanity is expressed in the phrase form of a servant; its unique and ideal character is glanced at when it is said, “in fashion as a man.]
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
made: Psa 22:6, Isa 49:7, Isa 50:5, Isa 50:6, Isa 52:14, Isa 53:2, Isa 53:3, Dan 9:26, Zec 9:9, Mar 9:12, Rom 15:3, 2Co 8:9, Heb 2:9-18, Heb 12:2, Heb 13:3
the form: Isa 42:1, Isa 49:3, Isa 49:6, Isa 52:13, Isa 53:11, Eze 34:23, Eze 34:24, Zec 3:8, Mat 12:18, Mat 20:28, Mar 10:44, Mar 10:45, Luk 22:27, Joh 13:3-14, Rom 15:8
in the: Phi 2:6, Joh 1:14, Rom 1:3, Rom 8:3, Gal 4:4, Heb 2:14-17, Heb 4:15
likeness: or, habit
Reciprocal: Gen 22:9 – bound Exo 21:32 – General Lev 16:4 – holy linen coat 1Sa 18:4 – stripped himself 2Sa 6:20 – glorious 1Ki 12:7 – If thou wilt Psa 8:5 – thou Psa 110:7 – therefore Isa 43:10 – and my servant Dan 10:16 – like Zec 6:13 – bear Mat 3:15 – for Mat 11:29 – for Mat 12:42 – behold Mat 17:2 – transfigured Joh 1:15 – he was Joh 5:27 – because Joh 6:38 – not 1Co 11:3 – and the head of Christ 2Co 13:4 – he was Heb 2:17 – it Rev 1:13 – like
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
(Php 2:7.) . The pronoun is placed emphatically, but the meaning of this clause is of course shaped or modified by the view which expositors have taken of the preceding clauses. The verb is literally to make empty, or bring about that which represents-exinanivit, as in the Vulgate. It does not vaguely mean, as Grotius and others render, He became poor, or made Himself poor, or He led a poor life- libenter duxit vitam inopem-for the image is not in harmony with the preceding clauses. Those who maintain that Christ is described here only in His historical state, are driven to such an interpretation. Thus, Tittmann and Keil, followed by van Hengel, give it generally-sed semet ipse depressit-a meaning which the word does not bear, and which anticipates the subsequent . De Wette refers the phrase not to the first, but the second preceding clause, and understands it as denoting something He might have had, but did not actually possess. But we must not forget, that in his opinion the reference is to the earthly existence of Christ, and that equality with God means divine honour. Mller holds a similar view. When he puts the question, of what did Jesus despoil Himself? he replies, not of the form of God, for He neither did nor could lay aside the divine nature; but He laid aside equality with God. Now this confusion proceeds from a previous error-a mistaken idea of the meaning of -for we have shown that this noun does not signify nature, but external and distinctive aspect, or that by which nature displays itself. The same confusion of thought mars the exegesis of Ellicott, and for the same reason, that he blends the idea of the form of God too much with that of the nature of God, which it implies, but from which it is quite distinct. When we put the question, of what did He empty Himself? our reply at once is, of the form of God; and if it be asked why He did so? the apostle also answers, because He thought it no object of desire, in comparison with man’s salvation, to be equal with God, or to be in the possession of this form. When He came to earth, He divested Himself of His glory. There was an occasional gleam, as one may still recognize the sun even when obscured by a cloud. If we go back to the Old Testament, and contemplate the form of God as there portrayed, then, keeping still to the sacred imagery employed, we might in all reverence add the following sentences:-Christ came not in that Majesty which He possessed, and by which the old world had been dazzled. No troops of angels girt Him about; nature did not do Him homage as God; the voice of the seven thunders was silent; the wings of the wind were collapsed and motionless; and the coals of fire were quenched. Darkness was not His pavilion; Lebanon did not tremble, nor was Jordan driven back. The lamps of the sky were not trimmed to honour the night in which this man-child was born into the world. It was not Jehovah, as He bowed the heavens and came down, but Jesus made of a woman, and cradled in a manger. It was in short a birth, not a theophany. But Jesus was originally in the form of God, and might have appeared in the world with the appalling majesty of Sinai; or as when the psalmist described Him robed in cloud, storm, and fire-mist, and guarded by a thick spray of burning coals; or as when Habakkuk sublimely sings of Him heralded by the pestilence, the everlasting mountains scattered, and the perpetual hills bowing before Him; or as when He appeared transfigured, His face as the sun, and His raiment as the light. Still further, the apostle says of Him-
-having taken the form of a servant. The participle points out the mode in which this self-emptying was accomplished, and the mode indicates also the means. Khner, 668. The act expressed by the aorist participle seems coincident in time with that denoted by the verb. Bernhardy, p. 383; Stallbaum, Phaedo, 62, d. When the process of assuming a servant’s form was completed, that of self-divestment was completed too. He exchanged the form of God for the form of a servant. The two phrases, and , are therefore in pointed contrast. If the form of God signify the external aspect or distinctive characteristics of God, the form of a servant will signify the external aspect or distinctive characteristics of a servant.
The phrase is not to be taken as expressing either the humility or sorrow of Christ’s life, as Piscator, Heinrichs, and Hoelemann emphasize it. The general meaning is-He bore about Him the marks of servitude. The service referred to is service to God; His uniform declaration being -that He came to do His Father’s will. But service which was primarily offered to God, was also in itself of benefit to man, intended for him and done for him. Isa 52:13; Isa 52:15; Mat 20:28; Luk 22:27; Rom 15:8. The servant of the Father condescended to minister to man; and Jesus, girt with a towel, and laving the water on Peter’s feet, is seen truly in the form of a servant. Some, however, lay too much stress on His service, as being almost wholly done to men, while Meyer, Wiesinger, van Hengel, Mller, and Baumgarten-Crusius hold to the idea of exclusive divine service. But in obeying God, He laboured for men. He who might have been served upon the throne, stood before it serving. Such is the striking contrast which the apostle brings out. Chrysostom remarks on the use of the two participles- , , , –
-being made in the likeness of men. Meyer prefers, having made His appearance -referring for examples to Mar 1:4, and Memorab. 3.3, 6. This clause points out how the form of a servant was assumed, though there be no connecting particle. Khner, 676; Stuart, 188. Christ became a servant in becoming man. It is pressing the participle too much to give it, with Rilliet, the strict sense of being born-, a le sens de natre; nor does it serve any purpose, with the same author and Rheinwald, to resolve the phrase into- -though abstract nouns with a preposition are frequent in Hellenistic Greek. Meyer would take in the sense of Angethanseins- that is, to be in, as one is in his clothes, to be clothed in; a mere refinement. is plural, approaching, as Robinson says, to the nature of an adjective, and signifying men generally. Jesus had the likeness of men, or appeared as men usually appear, was in no way as a man distinguished from men. But the use of such a noun as may imply, as has been often said, that still He was different from other men. He was not identical in all respects with other men. As Meyer says, He was not purus putus homo; or, as Theophylact said before him, He was not . He was Divinity incarnate-the Word made flesh. The superhuman was personally allied to the human -the higher nature was united to His manhood. Whether the adjuncts of humanity are referred to in the , may be a question. It is probable that all the ills that characterize humanity generally may be included; for that Christ markedly wanted any of its common characteristics, His likeness to man would have been lessened in proportion. His sinlessness, indeed, did not seem to impress his contemporaries, for they called Him wine-bibber, sabbath-breaker, blasphemer, demoniac, and rebel. But he shared in the common lot of men, and never wrought a miracle to exempt Himself from it. When hungry, He would not change the stones into bread; when wearied, He lay down on the well of Jacob; when faint on the cross, He exclaimed, I thirst. But the mere phrase will not of itself express that scorn, contempt, ignominy, and sorrow which threw their shadow over the Saviour’s historical career. There is, however, something more in the words than van Hengel deduces-Christum quamquam Dei imaginem referret, Deique filius esset, se hominum tamen instar mandatis ejus subjecisse.
The apostle pauses, as if for a moment, in his rapid accumulation. He had described Christ as being in the form of God, as not regarding equality with God as a seizure, and therefore as emptying Himself, having taken upon Him the form of a servant, and being made in the likeness of men. This is, however, only the first portion of the representation -Christ’s assumption of a serving humanity, but the picture is not complete. From heaven to earth He descended by emptying Himself; but after being on earth, He humbled Himself by His obedience to the death. Or He laid aside the form of God, and took that of a servant; but in that servant’s form He still abased Himself even to the cross. The transition from the one depth to the yet lower depth is marked by -the subject is taken up at this point-such a resumption imparting freshness and emphasis. To make the next clause the concluding one of the description, while the finishing account would then begin abruptly by the verb , is bald and disjointed.
Fuente: Commentary on the Greek Text of Galatians, Ephesians, Colossians and Phillipians
Php 2:7. Made himself of no reputation all comes from two Greek words, and they are rendered “emptied himself” by the Englishman’s Greek New Testament, and four other translations that I have consulted render it the same. Paul means that Christ divested himself of the glorious form He had before he came to the earth. (See the comments on the preceding verse.) Christ became like a servant in form only, because all slaves in the various ranks were men (not angels), in order that He might be capable of death for the sake of mankind.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Php 2:7. but emptied himself, taking the form of a servant. This literal rendering of the Greek expresses by a figure the act of Christ in the incarnation. But no figure ever exactly represents that for which it is put, and must therefore never be too closely pressed. For the various expositions of the text, see Excursus subjoined to Php 2:11. It is, however, certain that St. Paul did not intend us to understand by the word empty, that from Christ by the incarnation the Divinity was altogether withdrawn. The glory of the Godhead was still there, and manifested itself often in deeds of power. He was still Himself, the Divine in person, though instead of the form of God He for a time condescended to wear the form of a slave. Taking the form of a servant, this was the manner in which the emptying of the text took place, and has suggested for the translation another figure, to divest. Christ had possessed from eternity all those qualities and attributes which are distinctly Divine; these He now, as it were, puts off, lets them not constantly be seen, and wears the character and manifests the attributes of a servant. But as the figure to empty might be pressed to say too much, for the Godhead remained though it was veiled; so to divest is in danger of saying what is inexact in another way, and painting the Divine character as something so distinct from the human, that the God-man would be made not one but two persons. That which the world has only known in Christ, it is no marvel that it has no language to explain.
being made in the likeness of men. The verb signifies the coming into any state of being. Christ at His incarnation entered on a new manifestation of Himself. He had before been in the form of God, He now assumes a human likeness. And it is said of men, that we may understand the expression generally of the human race. Thus the apostles words avoid any sense like that in which the Docet of old spake of Christs human body as a mere phantom, and St. Paul says, He wore on earth the human figure, a form such as is common to men.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Php 2:7. But Or, nevertheless, as frequently signifies, and is rendered in our version, particularly Mar 14:36; Joh 11:15; 1Co 9:12; Gal 4:30; 2Ti 1:12. This is mentioned, because the critics, who would render the last clause, he did not covet, or catch at, a likeness to, or equality with God, build much of their argument on the opposition of the two clauses, and the force of this particle ; as if the sense were, He did not affect this equality, but humbled himself; an interpretation which, as Bishop Burnet well observes, is extremely cold and insipid, as if it were a mighty argument of humility, that though Christ wrought miracles, which they strangely think to be signified by the phrase of being in the form of God, yet he did not set up for Supreme Deity! But the truth is, the power of working miracles is never, in Scripture, styled the form of God; and, indeed, were this all that was intended by that phrase, both Moses and Elias, and our Lords apostles, might, upon that account, be said to have been in the form of God; seeing both Moses and Elias wrought many miracles on earth; and Christ declared concerning his disciples, that they should work greater miracles than he had wrought. Made himself of no reputation Greek, , literally, he emptied himself; divested himself both of the form of God, and of the worship due to him as God, when he was made in the likeness of men. In other words, he was so far from tenaciously insisting upon, that he willingly relinquished, his claim: he was content to forego the glories of the Creator, and to appear in the form of a creature: nay, to be made in the likeness of the fallen creatures; and not only to share in the disgrace, but to suffer the punishment due to the meanest and vilest of them all. He emptied himself: for though in a sense he remained full, (Joh 1:14,) yet he appeared as if he had been empty; for he veiled his fulness, at least from the sight of men; yea, he not only veiled, but in some sense renounced the glory which he had before the world was: taking, and by that very act emptying himself, the form of a servant To his Father and to his Fathers creatures; yea, to men, even to poor and mean men, being among his disciples as one that served. And was made Or born, as may be properly rendered; in the likeness of men Subject to all our wants and infirmities, and resembling us in all things but sin. And hereby he took the form of a servant; and his doing this would have been astonishing humiliation, even if he had appeared possessed of the wealth, power, and glory of the greatest monarch; but it was much more so, as he assumed human nature in a state of poverty, reproach, and suffering. This expression, it must be observed, born in the likeness of men, does not imply that Christ had only the appearance of a man: for the word , rendered likeness, often denotes sameness of nature. Thus Adam is said, (Gen 5:3,) to beget a son in his own likeness, after his image; and Christ, , to be made like his brethren in all things, by partaking of flesh and blood, Heb 2:14-17. Or, In the likeness of men, may mean in the likeness of sinful men, as it is expressed Rom 8:3; made subject to all those pains, diseases, and evils which sinful men endure. The antithesis in this passage is elegant. Formerly, Christ was in the form of God; but, when born into the world, he appeared in the form of a servant, and in the likeness of men.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
2:7 But made himself of {g} no reputation, and took upon him the {h} form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men:
(g) He brought himself from all things, as it were to nothing.
(h) By taking our manhood upon him.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Instead of maintaining His former manner of existence our Lord "emptied Himself" (NASB), "made himself nothing" (NIV), or "laid aside His privileges" (NASB margin, Gr. ekenosen). From this Greek word we get the term "kenosis," which refers to the doctrine of Christ limiting Himself when He became a man. The kenosis theory in theology deals with this subject.
What did He lay aside? It was not His deity. Jesus did not cease to be God when He became a man. This is clear from the context as well as from other Scriptures (e.g., Joh 10:30; Col 1:15-20; et al.). He did not lay aside His dependence on the Father either. As the terms "Son" and "Father" reflect, the Son was always dependent on His Father within the administrative order of the Godhead.
Taking humanity imposed certain restrictions on Jesus Christ, including those involved in possessing a physical body and a human, though not a sinful, nature. He laid aside the glory and freedom that His former manner of existence afforded Him when He became a man. He became dependent on the Father in a different sense than had been true formerly. However, Paul did not say that Jesus emptied Himself of something. He simply said that He emptied Himself, that is, He poured Himself out. [Note: Ibid., p. 210.] Compare Isa 53:12, where the prophet wrote that the Servant of the Lord poured out Himself to death.
"It is not ’Of what did he empty himself?’ but ’Into what did he empty himself?’" [Note: Motyer, p. 113.]
Paul described Jesus’ self-emptying as taking the form of a bond-servant. "Taking" (Gr. labon) does not imply an exchange but adding something. The Lord did not lay aside the form of God; He did not cease to be God. He added the "form" of man. The same Greek word, morphe, occurs in Php 2:6 where it describes outward appearance that accurately reveals inward nature. Earlier Paul described himself and Timothy as bond-servants (Php 1:1). Bond-servants are not just men. They are servants. The Messianic title "Servant of the Lord" reflects this humility and condescension of our Savior.
Furthermore Jesus Christ became in the likeness of men (cf. Rom 8:3). "Likeness" (Gr. homoiomati) does not mean exactness (Gr. eikon). Even though Jesus had a fully human nature, that nature was not sinful. Every other human being has a sinful human nature. Moreover Jesus had a divine nature as well as a human nature.
As an example to the readers, this verse is an advance on the previous one. It shows that Jesus Christ was not just willing to change His behavior for others, but He really did so by becoming a man who was a servant.