Verse explainer
Paul isn't describing a self-improvement hustle — he's a runner who has forgotten the laps behind him and is straining toward a finish line only God's call can define.
I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.
BSBI press on toward the goal to win the prize of God's heavenly calling in Christ Jesus.
The plain meaning
Philippians 3:14 sits inside Paul's athletic metaphor that runs from verse 12 onward. He has just said he doesn't count himself as having already arrived (v. 12) and that he forgets what lies behind, straining toward what lies ahead (v. 13). The "mark" (Greek: skopos) is the goal post at the end of the stadium's marked line — the fixed point the runner must keep his eye on or be disqualified. The "prize" is what awaits at the tape: eternal life, the crown Paul elsewhere calls the "crown of righteousness" (2 Timothy 4:8). Crucially, the calling is described as "high" or "heavenly" — it originates from God above, not from Paul's own ambition. Adam Clarke notes that Greek runners who strayed beyond the marked line were not crowned even if they crossed first — the point being that the direction of the race, not just the effort, is set by God. The verse is Paul's personal testimony, not a generic motivational motto: he is straining forward because the goal was given to him from outside himself.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
Clarke draws on the Greek stadium custom: the skopos was the white line runners had to keep their eye on from start to finish, and those who crossed it were disqualified regardless of speed. He also cites the aged Diogenes refusing to slow down near the end of the race — the point being that proximity to the finish demands more intensity, not less. Clarke identifies the "prize" with the crown of martyrdom and glorious resurrection Paul expected.
JFB insists the "high calling" is not Paul's unique apostolic summons but the common calling of all Christians to salvation in Christ — a calling that comes from heaven and therefore directs the mind heavenward. The prize is the unfading crown of glory, and the race belongs to every believer, not to apostles alone. This reading opens the verse outward rather than leaving it as Paul's private autobiography.
Gill reads verse 14 inside the whole passage (vv. 8–14): pressing toward the mark means holding together everything Paul has said — counting prior religious credentials as loss, desiring to be found in Christ's righteousness, and disclaiming any present perfection. The mark is Christ himself; the pressing forward is inseparable from the forgetting of past achievements and the ongoing acknowledgment that one has not yet arrived.
The word behind it
"Mark" or "goal" — literally the fixed point a runner fixes his gaze on. It shares a root with the verb skeptomai (to look, to watch), giving us our word "scope." In the Greek stadium, runners had to stay on the marked line (kanon) between start and goal; to stray was to be disqualified. The word appears only here in the New Testament, and its athletic precision matters: this is not a vague aspiration but a fixed, externally defined endpoint set by God's call.
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