Philippians and Philemon: Prison Epistles, Part 2
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Lesson OneOverview of Philippians (Philippians 1–4)22 Activities|1 Assessment
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: Philippians 1–4
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In | Workbook: Joy in Philippians
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In | The Mind of Christ in Believers
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In | Workbook: A Christ Poem in Philippians
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In | Workbook: Two Sermons Around the Christ Poem
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In | Joy and Rejoicing
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In | Unity in the Midst of Turmoil
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In | Workbook: Piecing Together Paul’s Biography
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In | Workbook: Philippians and Isaiah
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Behind | Workbook: “ . . . a Hymn to Christ as to a god”
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Behind | Onsite: Philippi - First Converts in Europe
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Behind | Citizenship in Philippi
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Behind | Paul vs. the Stoics on Suffering
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Behind | Onsite: Paul's Religious Resume - View from a Philippian Latrine
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Behind | 360 View: Philippi - Public Latrine
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Behind | The Mystical Value of Suffering
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Behind | Onsite: Philippi - The Birth of the Christian Church in Europe
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In Front | The Source and Focus of Our Joy
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In Front | Lessons from the Persecuted Church
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In Front | Workbook: Reflection
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Lesson TwoPhilippians: Suffering and Community (Philippians Review)22 Activities
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: Philippians Review
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In | Workbook: A Pattern of Life and Death in Philippians
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In | Paul the Citizen and Prisoner
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In | Suffering and Heavenly Citizenship
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In | Workbook: Paul’s Prayer in Philippians and Colossians
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In | Partners in the Gospel
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In | Workbook: Paul Teaching by Example
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In | Paul Teaching by Example
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Behind | Friendship, Patronage, Reciprocity
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Behind | Teaching by Example in the Ancient World
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Behind | Feigned Perplexity in Philippians
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Behind | Roman Citizenship and Jail
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Behind | Onsite: Citizen and Prisoner
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Behind | 360 View: Philippi - Prison of Paul
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In Front | Workbook: Relationships and Recommendations
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In Front | Letters from Jail
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In Front | Martin Luther King, Jr.
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In Front | Workbook: Martin Luther King, Jr.
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In Front | A Focus on Suffering and Death
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In Front | Workbook: Guiding Questions - Philippians
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Lesson ThreeOverview of Philemon22 Activities
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: Philemon
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In | Workbook: Themes in Philemon
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In | Introductory Prayer
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In | Prayer and Thanksgiving
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In | Paul's Appeal
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In | Aspects of Reconciliation in Philemon
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In | Workbook: Aspects of Reconciliation in Philemon
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In | Workbook: Colossians and Philemon
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Behind | Onsite: Philemon and Onesimus
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Behind | Advocacy, Mediation, Commendation
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Behind | Workbook: A Letter of Benefaction, Part 1
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Behind | Workbook: A Letter of Benefaction, Part 2
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Behind | Workbook: A Letter of Benefaction, Part 3
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Behind | Workbook: A Letter of Benefaction, Part 4
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Behind | Onsite: Paul's Prison Letters - View from St. Paul's
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In Front | Getting Personal in Ministry
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In Front | Paul Sends Onesimus as a Test
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In Front | Family Ethic and Ideal Society
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In Front | Workbook: Ask Only What You Pray For
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In Front | Workbook: An Agent of Reconciliation
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Lesson FourPaul and Slavery (Philemon, Romans 6 Review)17 Activities|1 Assessment
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: Review Philemon, Romans 6
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In | Workbook: Slavery as a Metaphor in Paul
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In | Slaves of Christ
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In | Submission and Kindness
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In | Slavery and "Freedom"
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In | The Word “Slave” in the OT
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Behind | Slavery in the Roman Empire
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Behind | Workbook: Slavery in Rome
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Behind | Slavery in the NT Church
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In Front | How Does Paul Respond to Slavery?
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In Front | Use and Misuse of Slavery Texts
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In Front | Prohibitions and Protections in the Old Testament
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In Front | Eved in Translation, Part 2
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In Front | The Gospel as a Liberating Force
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In Front | Workbook: Guiding Questions - Philemon
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Lesson FiveSocial Impact9 Activities|4 Assessments
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Getting Started
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In Front | Workbook: A Social Cause
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In Front | The Social Impact of the Bible
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In Front | American Civil Rights and the Bible
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In Front | Imperialism and the Bible
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In Front | The Bible and the Environment
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In Front | Personal Relationships and Big Ideas
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In Front | Workbook: Reflection
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Course Wrap-UpCourse Completion1 Activity|1 Assessment
In Front | American Civil Rights and the Bible
One of the better-known relationships between the Bible and social activism is found in the ministry and work of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. In his famous “I Have a Dream” speech given at the 1963 march on Washington D.C., he quotes from Isaiah 40:4-5, casting a vision of a biblical society transformed to mirror the harmonious communion of God:
I have a dream that one day every valley shall be exalted, every hill and mountain shall be made low, the rough places will be made plain, and the crooked places will be made straight, and the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together.
This is our hope. This is the faith that I go back to the South with. With this faith we will be able to hew out of the mountain of despair a stone of hope. With this faith we will be able to transform the jangling discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood. With this faith we will be able to work together, to pray together, to struggle together, to go to jail together, to stand up for freedom together, knowing that we will be free one day.
—Martin Luther King, Jr.
In a final speech before his assassination, King seems to hint at his premature death by connecting his role in the civil rights movement with that of Moses as he led the Israelites through the desert, but did not live to see his people inhabit the land that God had promised them:
Like anybody, I would like to live a long life. Longevity has its place. But I’m not concerned about that now. I just want to do God’s will. And he’s allowed me to go up to the mountain. And I’ve looked over. And I’ve seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the Promised Land!
—Martin Luther King, Jr.
While King is the most well-known civil rights activist, many other African Americans referred to the Bible in their pursuit of justice. Modjeska Simkins, the secretary of the NAACP in South Carolina, drew on a wide range of biblical themes and images in confronting racism. She compared white persecution and lynching to the murder of Abel by his brother Cain in Genesis, and offered a connection between Job and the African-American people:
Like ourselves—Job (was in a) great struggle against power. In Ephesians 6:12 we find, [“]For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers, against the rulers of darkness in this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.[”] Make no mistake. That is where we are. Wrestling against evil in high places—against poor, disenfranchised, various forms of racial and sexual abuse, obvious and subtle . . . We are striving to exist in an alien society.
James Lawson was a Methodist minister who worked with King and other activists, and after King’s death, continued to train younger activists in the tactics of non-violence. When faced with persecution he insisted:
The politics of Jesus and the politics of God are that people should be fed, that people have access to life, that people should be treated equally and justly. Especially the marginalized. The poor, the illiterate, the jailed, the hungry, the naked—those are all terms Jesus uses.
Lawson found not only guidance but also strength in the Bible.
There’s an idea in the New Testament that love vanquishes all fear. There is all across the Bible the advice, “Do not be afraid! Do not be dismayed. When you see all these things happening, do not be alarmed.”
Along with his fellow activists, guided and empowered by the Bible, Lawson had an enormous impact on American society and the place of African Americans within it.”
Sources and helpful resources: David L. Chappell, A Stone of Hope: Prophetic Religion and the Death of Jim Crow, 2004, pp. 63, 66;; Heidi Hall, “Civil rights advocate James Lawson was rooted in faith,” in The Tennessean, March 02, 2017; Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream,” Research and Education Institute, August 28, 1963; Martin Luther King, Jr., “I’ve Been to the Mountaintop,” Americanrhetoric.com, April 3, 1968.