Cooperation with God – An Antinomy   

Cooperation with God – An Antinomy   

Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling – Philippians 2:12

Hebrews 13:20-21

Now may the God of peace – who brought up from the dead our Lord Jesus, the great Shepherd of the sheep, and ratified an eternal covenant with his blood – may he equip you with all you need for doing his will. May he produce in you, through the power of Jesus Christ, every good thing that is pleasing to him. All glory to him forever and ever! Amen

A Lesson in Responsibility and Leadership

A medium-sized company in Des Moines was struggling to complete its projects on schedule. After a careful review, management recognized that the problem did not rest solely with employees. The deeper issue stemmed from leadership and then spread throughout the organization. Managers had failed to set the proper tone, and that lack of direction was reflected in the workforce. Employees appeared increasingly disengaged, often gathering in small groups to talk and spending large amounts of time on their cell phones rather than focusing on their responsibilities. As a result, productivity declined, and important work remained unfinished.

Instead of responding immediately with disciplinary action, management chose a more creative approach, using humor to expose the problem and make the message memorable. They posted this notice on the employee bulletin board:

“It has come to the attention of management that some of its employees apparently are dying on the job but failing to fall down. It has become impossible to distinguish between those that are dead and those that are still alive. This practice must stop. Therefore, any employee found dead in the upright position will immediately be terminated and dropped from the payroll.”

The notice was humorous, but its underlying message was clear. A workplace cannot function well when responsibility is neglected. Healthy leadership requires more than assigning tasks and expecting results. Effective leaders accept responsibility for both achievements and failures. They set realistic goals, model the work ethic they expect from others, and ensure their teams have the resources needed to succeed. Rather than leading from a distance, they remain actively involved, offering guidance, encouragement, and practical support. When necessary, they step in and work alongside their people to accomplish the task.

The Call to Active Obedience

Philippians 2:12: “Work hard to show the results of your salvation, obeying God with deep reverence and fear.”

Philippians 2:12: “Work out your salvation with fear and trembling.”

The Father does more than provide salvation for His children; He calls them to live it out in a way that reflects its power and meaning. In Paul’s teaching, salvation is not merely a passive experience, something received and then left untouched. Salvation is a transforming gift that must be expressed through a life of active obedience. Paul commands believers to work out their own salvation.

Through faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, believers have received the gracious gift of salvation. This gift is personal for each child of the King and serves as a guiding principle for how they should conduct their lives. “Working out one’s salvation” does not imply earning or supplementing what Christ has achieved. Instead, it refers to the process of expressing the reality of salvation in daily actions through a faithful partnership with God. What God has generously bestowed upon us internally should manifest itself outwardly in our everyday lives.

The Meaning of “Work Out”

The Greek word translated as “work” is katergázomai. Katergázomai comes from kata, a preposition that often adds intensity, and ergázomai, which means “to work, perform, accomplish, or carry out.” The core nuance is “thoroughness,” “not just doing something, but bringing an action to its intended end, carrying it through to completion, or putting it fully into effect.”

This meaning adds depth to Paul’s exhortation. He is not speaking of a casual or partial effort but of a sustained, serious commitment to bring salvation’s effects to maturity in one’s life. The word picture captures the essence of a football coach calling on team members to give every ounce of energy to the game, leaving nothing in the field, or a military commander urging soldiers to fulfill their mission with complete resolve. Paul’s point is that the children of the King are to pursue obedience with discipline, seriousness, and wholehearted devotion. Nothing is to be held back. They are to persevere until the transforming work of salvation is clearly seen in the way they live.

The Paradox of Divine Enablement

The passage presents a profound and beautiful paradox. As children of the King, we are commanded to do what the Father Himself is already doing within us. We are called to active obedience, yet that obedience is sustained by divine power. The Father does not merely set the standard and leave His children to meet it alone. He works within us, stirring desire, granting strength, and enabling faithful action.

The Christian life is a life of deliberate cooperation with the God who both motivates and empowers His children. It is neither passive surrender nor self-reliant striving. We are indeed required to labor, but never independently. The Father provides both the motivation and the inner strength necessary to fulfill it. Prayerfully living out salvation means responding to His direction with reverence, diligence, and trust.

REFLECT & PRAY

The Father has a distinct assignment for every child of the King. None of us is overlooked or insignificant. Each of us is specially loved, uniquely created, and personally called. Therefore, each of us is encouraged to work with the Father to accomplish His plans.

Father, thank You for not only calling us to do Your will but also for giving us the desire and strength to accomplish it. Teach us to cooperate more fully with You in the work You are performing within us so that our lives may reflect the reality of the salvation You have given us.

INSIGHT

Insight Into Divine Enablement

The Father not only gives His children a calling but also provides both the motivation and the capacity to fulfill it. He awakens the desire to do His will and then works within us to supply the strength to carry it out. As children of the King become more aware of His active presence within them, they are moved to pursue His purpose with greater willingness, confidence, and joy.

Philippians 2:13: “For God is working in you, giving you the desire and the power to do what pleases him.”

Philippians 2:13 establishes an essential truth for every child of the King: the call to live in a way that pleases the Father is matched by His ongoing work within them.

Yet this responsibility is not carried out through human effort alone. The Father Himself works in the hearts of His children, shaping their desires so that they increasingly want what He wants. His initiative becomes the source of both the impulse and the ability to do so.

The Father’s Work Within Us

Paul’s language highlights the mysterious depth of this divine activity. The Greek verb translated as “working” is energeō, meaning “dynamic, effective working or operating with power, to operate effectively, or to accomplish something with power.” The English word energy derives from this term. The idea is not mere motion but effective action that produces results.

What is the difference between energeō vs. katergázomai? Energeō focuses on activity, whilekatergázomai focuses on accomplishment. It is the distinction between effort and result.

Energeō is the Greek verb that is also used to describe the work God accomplishes. His actions are always full, effective, and purposeful. What God starts, God finishes.

The Greek verb form is a present participle, indicating continuous action. God is in us, and He is always working. He never stops.

The Paradox of Cooperation

The Christian life involves a balance between divine action and human effort. It highlights two key points: first, believers must actively work and demonstrate their salvation; second, God is concurrently at work within them, providing the desire and strength needed. These two aspects are complementary rather than contradictory.

This is one of the great ironies of the Christian life: The Antinomy of Cooperation between the Father’s work and the work of His children.

The Pattern Seen in Scripture

The Father dedicated forty years to preparing Moses to lead the people of Israel. While Moses tended sheep, the Father was actively shaping him so that, one day, He could work through him. The Father prioritizes the workman over the work itself. His main focus is on the character and development of the individual rather than just the task at hand.

A child of the King’s desire to honor God is evidence of the Father’s living and active presence in the heart. He works within His children so that His desires increasingly become their desires. Where He creates the will, He also supplies the power to act.

Living in the Strength He Provides

Philippians 2:13 offers a deeply encouraging picture of the Christian life. The Father does not call His children to obey Him and then leave them to rely on their own limited strength. He is continually at work within them, awakening desires and supplying the power to carry out His will.

The Antinomy of Cooperation is that the children of the King are invited to undertake tasks that He alone empowers them to do. Our calling is to actively obey God, knowing that His work within us makes our obedience attainable. Consequently, our acts of obedience are not merely burdensome efforts aimed at achieving spiritual success; rather, they are a faithful response to the Father, who is at work within us.

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© Dr. H 2026

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