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Philippians 2:5-11

Context: The Christ Hymn of Philippians 2:5-11 is the NT's most compressed and exalted statement of the rejection-exaltation pattern. Paul introduces it as the basis for Christian ethics ("Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus"), but the hymn transcends moral instruction to present a cosmic narrative: Christ, existing in the form of God, did not grasp at equality but emptied Himself, took the form of a servant, humbled Himself to death on a cross---"therefore" God exalted Him to the highest place with the name above all names, so that every knee bows and every tongue confesses His lordship. The movement from preexistent glory through self-emptying and humiliation to super-exaltation constitutes the definitive NT expression of the pattern.

Greek Key Terms:

  • μορφή (morphe) - "form, essential nature" (vv. 6-7, "form of God" / "form of a servant"---the two poles of the descent)
  • κενόω (kenooo) - "to empty, make nothing" (v. 7, "emptied Himself")
  • ταπεινόω (tapeinooo) - "to humble, bring low" (v. 8, "humbled Himself")
  • ὑπερυψόω (hyperypsooo) - "to super-exalt, raise to the highest position" (v. 9, hapax legomenon---a word coined to express unprecedented exaltation)
  • χαρίζομαι (charizomai) - "to graciously give, bestow" (v. 9, "gave Him the name")
  • ἐξομολογέω (exomologeoo) - "to confess openly, acknowledge" (v. 11, every tongue confess)
  • κύριος (kyrios) - "Lord" (v. 11, Jesus Christ is Lord---the divine name)

OT Background: The Christ Hymn's structure echoes and consummates multiple OT trajectories. The descent-ascent pattern recalls Joseph's descent into the pit and prison before his exaltation (Genesis 37-41), Moses' descent into Midian exile before his return as deliverer (Exodus 2-3), and David's descent into fugitive life before his enthronement (1 Samuel 16-2 Samuel 5). The Servant Song of Isaiah 52:13-53:12 provides the most direct background: the Servant who is "exalted and lifted up" (52:13) yet "despised and rejected" (53:3), who "poured out His life unto death" (53:12) yet receives "a portion with the great" (53:12). The universal worship language of v. 10 ("every knee should bow") quotes Isaiah 45:23, a text where YHWH declares that every knee will bow to Him alone---Paul applies this YHWH text to Jesus, claiming divine-level exaltation. The "name above every name" (v. 9) connects to the OT theology of God's name as the revelation of His character and authority (Exodus 3:14-15; Isaiah 42:8).

Connections:

Christological Connection: Philippians 2:5-11 is the NT climax of the rejection-exaltation trajectory because it traces the pattern to its absolute extremes---from the highest possible starting point (equality with God) through the lowest possible descent (death on a cross) to the highest possible exaltation (the name above every name). The theological word hyperypsooo ("super-exalted") appears nowhere else in the Greek Bible; Paul coins it to express an exaltation beyond what existing vocabulary can capture. The descent-ascent structure moves through seven stages of downward movement: (1) existing in the form of God, (2) did not grasp equality, (3) emptied Himself, (4) took the form of a servant, (5) made in human likeness, (6) humbled Himself, (7) became obedient to death---even death on a cross. The word "therefore" (dio) in verse 9 is theologically decisive: it establishes a causal connection between humiliation and exaltation. God super-exalted Christ precisely because He descended to the lowest point. This is not a reversal despite the suffering but an exaltation through and because of it. The pattern is not accidental but constitutive: glory comes through humiliation, and the depth of the descent determines the height of the ascent. The escalation beyond all OT types is infinite. Joseph descended from favorite son to slave to prisoner---but Christ descended from equality with God to servant to corpse on a Roman cross. Moses was rejected by his kinsmen and fled to Midian---but Christ was rejected by His creation and descended to death itself. David was hunted by Saul for years---but Christ was hunted by sin, Satan, and death on behalf of all humanity. The Suffering Servant was "pierced for our transgressions"---and Christ was that Servant, the one to whom all the prophets pointed. Correspondingly, the exaltation surpasses all precedent. Joseph was exalted over Egypt; David over Israel; the Servant sees His offspring. But Christ receives "the name above every name"---the divine name itself---so that every creature in the universe acknowledges His lordship. The already/not-yet framework is embedded in the hymn: Christ has already been super-exalted (v. 9, aorist tense---completed action), but the universal confession "Jesus Christ is Lord" (v. 11) uses the subjunctive ("every tongue should confess"), indicating an eschatological goal not yet fully realized. Christ reigns now, but every knee has not yet bowed. The consummation awaits the day when the confession that is now voluntary becomes universal---when the pattern reaches its eternal completion and the Lamb who was slain receives the full measure of the glory due His name.

Connection Method(s): Typology (fulfillment statement) --- Philippians 2:5-11 presents Christ as the ultimate fulfillment of the rejection-exaltation pattern, with the descent-ascent structure recapitulating and infinitely surpassing all OT types. Also Promise-Fulfillment --- the universal worship language fulfills Isaiah 45:23's promise that every knee will bow to YHWH. Also Longitudinal Theme --- the hymn represents the supreme NT crystallization of the suffering-then-glory motif. ANTI-DEFAULT CHECK: Multiple methods converge here. Typological fulfillment is primary (Christ is the antitype who surpasses Joseph, Moses, David, and the Servant). Promise-fulfillment is also present because Paul applies YHWH's exclusive claim to universal worship (Isaiah 45:23) to Christ. The passage is not mere analogy or contrast---it is the definitive statement of the pattern's fulfillment.

Trajectory Table: 129 - Rejection Then Exaltation (Pattern of Suffering and Glory)