LET SOMEONE ELSE PAY IT
Philemon 1:10-11, 17-19a
Prayer
Philemon lived in a city
called Colossae when he heard that a great man named Paul
was preaching at Ephesus.
So he traveled from Colossae
to Ephesus to hear Paul preach.
He accepted Jesus.
He returned home.
He founded a Church.
Paul’s letter to the
Colossians was written to that Church.
But there was a problem.
Philemon was a slave owner.
He owned a slave named Onesimus.
Onesimus even decided that he
wouldn’t be a slave anymore.
He stole some of his master’s
money;
Made a dash for freedom;
Went to Rome.
He planned to get lost in the
big city.
He knew his stolen money
wouldn’t last forever.
And he wondered what to do
when it ran out.
He was a fugitive from
justice.
He had no hope;
No future.
According to Roman Law, a
runaway slave could be executed.
If anyone recognized him, he
could perish.
He was afraid of the
authorities.
He hid in the shadows.
About this time, the
authorities arrested Paul.
The Jews wanted to kill him.
But Paul was a Roman citizen.
He appealed his case to Rome.
It took awhile, but he was
eventually shipped off to Rome.
The Romans were good to him
while he waited on his case to be heard.
They even let him preach.
One day, he was preaching.
And the runaway slave, Onesimus,
was in the crowd.
Onesimus was touched by the
message.
He accepted Jesus as his Saviour.
Paul struck up a conversation
with him.
I can almost hear how it
went.
“Where are you from Onesimus?”
“I’m from Colossae.”
“I have a good friend in Colossae.”
“I won him to Jesus.”
“What’s his name?”
“Philemon.”
Onesimus was stunned.
He couldn’t believe his ears.
This was his old slave
master;
The one he had stolen from;
The one he was running away
from.
Paul could tell something was
wrong.
He wanted to know what it
was.
Onesimus wondered what to do.
Christians are told to put on
the whole armour of God;
Told to have our loins girt
about with truth (Eph. 6:13-14).
But telling the truth could
cost Onesimus.
He might have to be a slave
again.
He might be executed.
Onesimus thought about it.
But he didn’t think about it
very long.
He had made a commitment to
Jesus.
Telling the truth would
glorify Jesus.
But telling a lie would break
the Ten Commandments.
He would take a stand.
No matter what it cost, he
would tell the truth.
Nothing else would do.
He explained the situation to
Paul.
And then, Paul had a problem.
My mom would say he was
caught between a rock and a hard place.
He was caught between his old
friend, Philemon, the slave owner.
And his new friend, Onesimus,
the runaway slave.
He thought about it.
There was only one way to
handle this.
Onesimus had broken the law.
His sin could not be
overlooked.
Paul said, “You will have to
go back to Philemon.”
“But I will be your mediator.”
“I will write a letter to
Philemon.”
“You will take it to him.”
Onesimus agreed.
He would not let Jesus down.
Paul wrote the letter.
It’s in the Bible.
It’s called the Book of
Philemon.
Paul told Philemon, “I have
you on my prayer list.”
“I’ve heard of your love;”
“Of your love for Jesus,”
“Of your love for others”
(Verse 5).
“I’ve heard of your faith.”
“I pray that your faith will
result in good works;”
“That your faith will cause
you to make a difficult decision.”
He said, “As an apostle, I
could boldly order you to make it” (Verse 8).
“But for love’s sake, I’m
pleading with you to forgive Onesimus” (Verses 9-10).
He stole from you.
He ran away.
You can have him executed.
But I’m pleading with you to
love him the way Jesus loved you;
To forgive him the way Jesus
forgives you.
He’s been useless to you.
But he’s changed.
He’s come back to you.
He will help you.
I would like to keep him with
me (Verse 13).
But I can’t do that.
He’s your slave.
“I will not force this
decision on you.”
“I ask you to forgive him
because you want to.”
But Paul didn’t stop there.
He said, “I’m not asking you
to take him back as a slave.”
“I’m asking you to take him
back as a brother;”
“To treat him like a brother
in the flesh;”
“And to treat him like a
brother in the Lord” (Verse 16).
Then, Paul made a profound
statement.
“If I’m your brother,”
“Onesimus is your brother”
(Verse 17).
If one Christian is your
brother,
Every Christian is your
brother.
You can’t have it both ways.
Onesimus is your slave.
Or, Onesimus is your brother.
If he is your brother, you
have to forgive him.
And set him free.
But Paul didn’t stop there
either.
He knew that restitution had
to be made.
So he added, “If he hath
wronged thee, or oweth thee aught, put it on my
account” (Verse 18).
“I Paul have written it with
mine own hand.”
“ I will repay it” (Verse
19a).
Now, it’s important to
understand that this is a real story.
A secular writer named
Ignatius wrote a history of the early Church.
He wrote that Onesimus was a
Bishop in the early Church.
That’s quite a change.
This runaway slave and thief
became a Bishop in the early Church.
So this is a real story.
But it seems that God had
more than one reason for putting this story
in the Bible.
It’s a beautiful picture of
salvation.
I want to backtrack.
And make nine quick points.
1st---Every one of us has
been a slave;
Not a slave to Philemon;
A slave to Satan.
A slave to bad habits,
excuses, materialism;
Apathy, indifference, or
whatever.
Onesimus struggled with it.
Paul struggled with it.
And we have struggled with
it.
The purpose of our life is to
give our highest allegiance to God.
But we often give it to
Satan.
We let him control our
thoughts and actions.
We let him decide what we
will watch on TV, what we read, where we go,
Whether we will go to Church
or not;
Whether we will pray or not.
Whether we will witness or
not.
2nd---Every one of us has run
from something;
Not from Philemon;
From a deeper relationship
with Jesus.
Many of us may be on the run
right now.
We know what God wants us to
do.
But we don’t want to do it.
3rd---Every one of us has
felt the hopelessness that Onesimus felt.
A runaway slave had no hope.
If he got caught, he could
die.
A slave to Satan has no hope.
The soul that sinneth shall surely
die.
God will in no wise clear
the guilty.
The person who steps out of
this life without Jesus will perish.
Yes, many lost people say, “I’m
a good person.”
“I hope to go to heaven.”
But the Bible makes it clear
that they have no hope.
Souls are being destroyed
every day because people are slaves to Satan.
They are running from Jesus.
And they won’t stop.
4th---Every one of us needs a
Mediator.
Paul mediated between Onesimus
and Philemon;
Between the slave and the
slave master.
He wrote to Philemon, “I
beseech thee for Onesimus.”
He knew about mediators.
He told Timothy, “There is
one mediator between God and men, the man Christ
Jesus” (I Tim. 2:5).
All have sinned and come
short of the glory of God.
But not even one of us can
mediate our case before God.
Some say this is the
twenty-first century.
And we won’t accept this.
But the God of the Bible is
the absolute authority over everything that exists.
And when we stand before Him,
we will need a Mediator.
We will need Jesus to say
what Paul said, “I beseech thee for this one.”
“Why we will need a Mediator?”
God requires it.
That’s all we need to know.
God requires it.
His requirements are not
make-believe.
His requirements are absolute
necessities.
5th---We have to make things
right with the Master.
Paul told Onesimus, “If you
want to start a new life, you have to go to
Philemon.”
“You have to clear your
record.”
Many of us would like to stop
being a slave to apathy, bad habits, excuses,
materialism, etc.
We would like to live a
better life.
But before we can live a
better life;
We have to clear our record
with the Master.
Jesus said, “No man can come
to the Father, but by me.”
Peter said, “Neither is there
salvation in any other:”
“For there is none other name
under heaven given among men, whereby we
must be saved” (Acts 4:12).
So we have to clear our
record with the Master.
But why does He require us to
have Jesus as our Mediator?
Jesus bore our sins in His
own body.
He endured the wrath of God
on the cross.
He died in our place.
God gave Him a reward.
He’s our Mediator.
In fact, He’s the only
Mediator that God will accept.
6th---Every one of us needs
forgiveness.
Onesimus needed forgiveness.
He couldn’t go home without it.
What if we couldn’t go home?
What if we couldn’t see our
loved ones?
Wouldn’t that be awful?
Paul asked Philemon to
forgive Onesimus;
To take him back;
To act like he had never done
anything wrong.
I would guess that this was
hard for Philemon.
It’s hard to forgive those
who hurt us;
Hard to act like they’ve
never done anything wrong.
But that’s what we need from
God.
If we’re going to go home
(heaven), we need forgiveness.
We need for God to act like
we have never done anything wrong.
7th---Every one of us needs
to be set free.
Paul told Philemon, “Onesimus
is either your brother or your slave.”
“I’m asking you to treat him
like a brother and set him free.”
The Church is not a place for
slaves and slave masters;
There are no second class
citizens in the Church.
The saved are our brothers
and sisters in Christ.
And we are obligated to give
them this new standing.
Yes! Onesimus was a thief.
Yes! Onesimus was a runaway
slave!
Yes! Some in the Church have
done some awful things.
But if they are our brothers
and sisters in Christ, we are obligated to treat them
as equals.
Look at what happened to that
thief and runaway slave.
He became a Bishop in the
Church.
Everybody in the Church has
done something wrong.
But if we treat our brothers
and sisters in Christ the way we are suppose to treat
them, there is no telling how
much good they will eventually do in the Kingdom
of God.
8th---Every debt must be
paid.
Paul knew that Philemon owned
Onesimus;
That Philemon’s money was
stolen by Onesimus;
That Philemon deserved to be
paid for his losses.
So Paul said, “Put it on my
account;”
“I Paul have written it with
my own hand,”
“I will repay it” (Verses
18-19).
This is what Jesus said when
He took our place on the cross.
“Put it on His account.”
“I will pay their debt.”
Jesus paid it all,
All to Him I owe;
Sin had left a
crimson stain,
He washed it white
as snow.
9th---Every saved person is a
changed person.
Paul said, “Onesimus has
changed.”
“He has come back to you.”
“He will help you.”
Let this sink in.
Some people say they can’t
tell the difference between Christians and
non-Christians.
But Christians are suppose to
be different.
Christians are suppose to be
salt and light.
People should be able to look
at us and know that we have been with Jesus.
When Jesus becomes our Lord,
we stop being a slave to Satan.
We stop letting Satan
manipulate our lives.
If we haven’t changed since
we got saved, something is wrong.
If we don’t have a different
attitude about the things of God since we got saved,
something is wrong.
In a case like that, a person
needs to use this altar.
And straighten it out.