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Philippians 2:5-11

Greek Key Terms:

  • μορφή (morphē) - \"form, nature\" — \"existing in the form of God\" (v.6a) and \"taking the form of a servant\" (v.7b); the contrast is total: the servant did not exchange natures but took on an additional form — the divine servant who assumed the servant's place without ceasing to be divine
  • ἑαυτόν (heauton) - \"himself\" — used three times: \"did not count [equality with God] himself a thing to be grasped\" (v.6), \"emptied himself\" (v.7), \"humbled himself\" (v.8); the reflexive pronoun emphasizes that every movement was self-initiated — no coercion; the voluntary servant's declaration enacted at cosmic scale
  • κενόω (kenoō) - \"to empty, to make void\" — \"emptied himself, taking the form of a servant\" (v.7a); the kenosis: not the emptying of divine attributes but the voluntary non-use of divine prerogatives — the one who possessed everything chose the servant's posture of having nothing of His own
  • δοῦλος (doulos) - \"slave, servant\" — \"taking the form of a servant\" (v.7b); the NT's standard word for a bonded slave — the same social category as the Exodus 21 Hebrew servant, here applied to the eternal Son; the escalation from the Exodus servant (temporary debt-servant) to the divine Son (eternal Lord taking slave-form) is absolute

Context: Philippians 2:5-11 is the kenosis hymn, embedded within Paul's ethical exhortation to the Philippian church to pursue the same mind as Christ. The hymn's grammatical structure falls into two movements: the descent (vv.6-8) and the ascent (vv.9-11). The descent is entirely the Son's action — He did not grasp, He emptied Himself, He took the form of a servant, He humbled Himself, He became obedient. The ascent is entirely the Father's action — God highly exalted Him, gave Him the name above all names. The syntactical parallel is exact: the voluntary descent matches the divine vindication. What the Exodus 21 servant-law expressed institutionally — a servant who chose to remain, whose master acknowledges the choice — the kenosis hymn expresses cosmically: the eternal Son who chose the servant's place, whose Father raises and exalts Him to the highest position. The purpose of the hymn in Philippians 2 is not abstract theology but ethical formation: \"Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus\" (v.5) — the servant's mind is the template for the church's internal relations.

OT-to-OT Development: Philippians 2:5-11 draws on the servant-ear trajectory at multiple points. The voluntary self-emptying (v.7: \"emptied himself\") recapitulates the Exodus 21 servant's declaration: \"I do not want to go free\" — freedom voluntarily renounced. The \"form of a servant\" is the Deuteronomy 15 servant's posture: love-motivated, choosing the master's household as the genuine good. The obedience to death (v.8) is the Isaiah 50:4-6 Servant who did not rebel even when the opened ear led to suffering — \"I gave my back to those who beat me.\" The exaltation (v.9-11) develops the Isaiah 52:13 and 53:12 Servant's vindication: \"he shall be exalted and lifted up\" (52:13), \"I will divide him a portion with the many\" (53:12). The hymn is a compression of the entire Servant-Song trajectory, with the Exodus 21 servant-law providing the foundational legal-institutional frame. CRITICAL: Philippians 2:7 to Isaiah 53:12

Connections:

  • TO: Isaiah 52:13 (\"He shall be exalted and lifted up\" — the Servant's vindication that Philippians 2:9-11 identifies as Christ's exaltation), Isaiah 53:12 (\"he poured out his life unto death, and was numbered with the transgressors\" — the voluntary self-emptying that Philippians 2:7-8 recapitulates)
  • FROM OT: Isaiah 45:23 (\"every knee shall bow, every tongue confess\" — cited in Philippians 2:10-11 as the eschatological acclamation; YHWH's universal sovereignty is now predicated of Jesus)
  • FROM NT: John 13:4-5 (Jesus laying aside His garments to wash the disciples' feet — the kenosis enacted in miniature: the one who possessed all things took the servant's role), Matthew 23:11 (\"The greatest among you shall be your servant\" — the upside-down kingdom logic that the hymn grounds Christologically)

Christological Connection: Philippians 2:5-11 is the NT's most complete exposition of the Exodus 21 servant-law at Christological scale. Every essential feature of the pierced-ear ritual appears in the hymn: (1) Voluntary choice: \"did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped\" — the servant who could leave but does not; (2) Love as motive: the hymn is framed by love (v.2: \"complete my joy... having the same love\"; John 13:1 provides the love-declaration the hymn presupposes); (3) Form of a servant: the exact term doulos — the servant's mark; (4) Permanent servanthood: the exaltation of v.9-11 does not undo the Incarnation but confirms and vindicates it — the servant who chose to stay is now exalted as Lord while remaining the incarnate Son forever; (5) Public mark: every knee bows, every tongue confesses — the universal acknowledgment of the servant's permanent Lord-status.

The escalation from Exodus 21 to Philippians 2 is absolute: the Hebrew servant renounced temporal freedom for a human master; the eternal Son renounced divine prerogatives for the sake of humanity, choosing obedience to death — even death on a cross. The doorpost where His ear was pierced was not a household threshold but the cross, where the covenant-blood of the true Passover Lamb was shed. And the exaltation: the Exodus servant was acknowledged by the judges; the divine servant is acknowledged by \"every knee in heaven and on earth and under the earth\" (v.10) — the universal witness to the voluntary eternal servanthood of the Son.

Connection Method(s): Typology (Providential Type, Backward-Looking — the kenosis hymn retrospectively reveals the Exodus 21 servant-ritual as the institutional prototype for the Son's voluntary incarnation; the essential features of the type [choice, love, servant-form, permanent marking] correspond precisely to the antitype; retrospective identification is the primary interpretive mode, as no OT text explicitly identifies the Incarnation with Exodus 21; however, Psalm 40:6 and Isaiah 50:4-6 provide the OT's own forward-pointing indicators). Also Longitudinal Theme — Philippians 2:5-11 is the NT's fullest expression of the servant-voluntariness theme that runs from Exodus 21 through Deuteronomy 15, Psalm 40, and Isaiah 50. Also NT References (Isaiah 45:23 is cited in vv.10-11, and Isaiah 52:13/53:12 are echoed in the descent-ascent structure — both demonstrating that the hymn is the NT's application of the full Servant-Song trajectory to Christ's kenosis and exaltation).

Trajectory Table: 189 - The Pierced Ear (Voluntary Eternal Servanthood)