philippians 3:20

From: ID Sunday

Verse Text (Berean Standard Bible)

But our citizenship is in heaven, and we eagerly await a Savior from there, the Lord Jesus Christ,

EPH 2:19

Score: 69

COL 3:1-3

Score: 45

2CO 4:18-1

Score: 31

HEB 12:22

Score: 26

1PE 1:3-4

Score: 20

2TI 4:8

Score: 17

EPH 2:6

Score: 16

2CO 5:8

Score: 15

2PE 3:12-14

Score: 15

1TH 1:10

Score: 14

COL 1:5

Score: 13

HEB 9:28

Score: 12

HEB 10:34-35

Score: 11

1CO 1:7

Score: 11

MAT 6:19-21

Score: 11

GAL 4:26

Score: 10

PSA 73:24-26

Score: 10

ACT 1:11

Score: 9

TIT 2:13

Score: 9

LUK 12:32-34

Score: 9

REV 1:7

Score: 9

PRO 15:24

Score: 8

2TH 1:7-8

Score: 8

LUK 14:14

Score: 8

MAT 19:21

Score: 8

PSA 17:15

Score: 7

ISA 26:1-2

Score: 7

PHP 1:10

Score: 7

1TH 4:16

Score: 7

REV 21:10-27

Score: 6

PHP 1:18-21

Score: 4

PSA 16:11

Score: 4

LUK 12:21

Score: 1

Our conversation is in heaven - Ἡμως - το πολιτευμα· Our city, or citizenship, or civil rights. The word properly signifies the administration, government, or form of a republic or state; and is thus used by Demosthenes, page 107, 25, and 262, 27. Edit. Reiske. It signifies also a republic, a city, or the inhabitants of any city or place; or a society of persons living in the same place, and under the same rules and laws. See more in Schleusner. While those gross and Jewish teachers have no city but what is on earth; no rights but what are derived from their secular connections; no society but what is made up of men like themselves, who mind earthly things, and whose belly is their god, We have a heavenly city, the New Jerusalem; we have rights and privileges which are heavenly and eternal; and our society or fellowship is with God the Father, Son, and Spirit, the spirits of just men made perfect, and the whole Church of the first-born. We have crucified the flesh with its affections and lusts; and regard not the body, which we know must perish, but which we confidently expect shall be raised from death and corruption into a state of immortal glory.
3:20 By contrast, believers who know their home is in heaven (see Eph 2:19) with the Lord Jesus Christ fill their minds with thoughts of heaven (see Col 3:1-2; cp. 1 Cor 15:19; 1 Pet 2:11) and Christ’s return (see 1 Cor 1:7; Titus 2:13).
Who shall change our vile body,.... Which is defiled with sin, attended with frailty, and is mortal; and being dead, is sown and laid in the grave in corruption, weakness, and dishonour: in the Greek text it is, "the body of our humility"; sin has subjected the body to weakness, mortality, and death; and death brings it into a very low estate indeed, which is very humbling and mortifying to the pride and vanity man: now this vile body, in the resurrection morn, shall be stripped of all its vileness, baseness, and meanness; and be changed, not as to its substance, nor as to its form and figure, which shall always remain same, as did the substance and form of our Lord's body after his resurrection; but as to its qualities, it shall be changed from corruption to incorruption, Co1 15:42, from mortality to immortality, from weakness to power, from dishonour to glory, and be free from all sin: so the Jews say (b), that "the evil imagination, or corruption of nature, goes along with man in the hour of death, but does not return with him when the dead arise: and this change will be made by the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ, when he shall descend from heaven; who as he is the pledge, the first fruits, the exemplar, and meritorious cause, so he will be the efficient cause of the resurrection of the saints; who will be raised and changed by him, by his power, and by virtue of union to him: that it might be fashioned like unto his glorious body; or "the body of his glory", as it is now in heaven, and of which his transfiguration on the mount was an emblem and pledge; for glory, power, incorruption, and immortality, the bodies of the saints in the resurrection shall be like to Christ's, though not equal to it, and shall shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father. The Jews (c) have a notion, that "the holy blessed God will beautify the bodies of the righteous in future time, like the beauty of the first Adam: but their beauty and glory will be greater than that, it will be like the glory of the second Adam, the Lord from heaven, whose image they shall then bear: and whereas this requires almighty power, of which Christ is possessed, it will be done according to the working, the energy of his power and might; or as the Syriac version renders it, "according to his great power"; which was put forth in raising himself from the dead, and whereby he was declared to be the Son of God: and whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himself; not only sin, Satan, and the world, but death and the grave; and so consequently able to raise the dead bodies of his saints, and to change the qualities of them, and make them like unto his own: and now who would but follow such persons, who are citizens of heaven, have their conversation there, look for Christ the Saviour from thence, Phi 3:20, who when he comes will raise the dead in Christ first, put such a glory on their bodies as is on his own, Th1 4:16, and take them to himself, that where he is they may be also? see , Heb 6:12. (b) Midrash Tillim apud Galatin. de Arcan. Cathol. ver. l. 12. c. 2. (c) Midrash Hanneelam in Zohar in Gen. fol. 69. 1. Next: Philippians Chapter 4

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