Bible Verses

Philippians · Chapter 2

Philippians 2:3 — Bible Verse Meaning & Context

Read this verse slowly. Let it settle before you move on.

1080 × 1080 · Square

Background

— or pick from our presets below —

Save this verse to Pinterest
Pinterest's Title field is blank by default — tap the button to copy a ready-made title, then paste it after the share window opens.
Download image

Every download includes a small bibleverses.au mark so others can find us too.

Copied to clipboard

Both translations, side by side

WEB · World English Bible

"doing nothing through rivalry or through conceit, but in humility, each counting others better than himself;"

KJV · King James Version

"Let nothing3367 be done through2596 strife2052 or2228 vainglory2754; but235 in lowliness of mind5012 let2233 each240 esteem2233 other240 better than5242 themselves1438."

How the translations differ: The WEB is a modern public-domain revision of the 1901 ASV; the KJV dates to 1611. The KJV uses let, done, strife, vainglory, while the WEB renders these as doing, rivalry, conceit, humility. Both translate the same underlying Greek or Hebrew text — the differences are stylistic, not theological.

In context

Philippians 2:3 in Philippians 2

A Bible verse rarely stands alone. Here is Philippians 2:3 read with the verses immediately before and after — the surrounding flow of Philippians 2. Read the full chapter →

  1. v.1 If there is therefore any exhortation in Christ, if any consolation of love, if any fellowship of the Spirit, if any tender mercies and compassion,
  2. v.2 make my joy full, by being like-minded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind;
  3. v.3 doing nothing through rivalry or through conceit, but in humility, each counting others better than himself;
  4. v.4 each of you not just looking to his own things, but each of you also to the things of others.
  5. v.5 Have this in your mind, which was also in Christ Jesus,

Book background

About the Book of Philippians

Testament
New Testament
Genre
Pauline epistle
Author
Paul
Date written
c. 61–62 AD
Audience
The church at Philippi — Paul's most affectionate relationship
Chapters
4

Philippians is Paul's joy-saturated thank-you letter from prison. It contains the great Christ-hymn (2:5-11) describing his self-emptying and exaltation, the call to rejoice always (4:4), the secret of contentment "in any and every situation" (4:11-13), and the assurance that "he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion" (1:6).

Setting: Written from Roman imprisonment.

Key themes: joy · humility · partnership · contentment · Christ

Read Philippians from the beginning →

Memorisation aid

How to memorise Philippians 2:3

Philippians 2:3 contains 16 words in 3 clauses. Learn one clause at a time, then chain them. The first-letter mnemonic (FLM) under each clause is a memory hook — once you can speak the FLM from memory, the full clause follows.

  1. 1

    doing nothing through rivalry or through conceit

    DNTROT

  2. 2

    but in humility

    BIH

  3. 3

    each counting others better than himself;

    ECOBTH

Frequently asked

FAQ about Philippians 2:3

What does Philippians 2:3 say?

Philippians 2:3 reads: "doing nothing through rivalry or through conceit, but in humility, each counting others better than himself;" — from the New Testament, Philippians (Pauline epistle). The full verse is shown above with both the World English Bible (WEB) and King James Version (KJV) translations side by side.

What book of the Bible is Philippians 2:3 in?

Philippians 2:3 is in the book of Philippians, traditionally attributed to Paul and written around c. 61–62 AD. Philippians is pauline epistle in the New Testament, originally addressed to The church at Philippi — Paul's most affectionate relationship. Best known for "I can do all things through Christ" and the Christ-hymn (2:5-11).

What is the difference between Philippians 2:3 in WEB and KJV?

Philippians 2:3 in the World English Bible (WEB) reads: "doing nothing through rivalry or through conceit, but in humility, each counting others better than himself;". The King James Version (KJV) reads: "Let nothing3367 be done through2596 strife2052 or2228 vainglory2754; but235 in lowliness of mind5012 let2233 each240 esteem2233 other240 better than5242 themselves1438.". The WEB is a modern public-domain translation that updates the KJV's 1611 English while keeping a similar formal-equivalence style. Both render the same underlying Greek or Hebrew text.

How long is Philippians 2:3?

Philippians 2:3 is 16 words in the WEB translation (108 characters), broken into 3 clauses. It is short and well-suited to memorisation. Estimated reading time is about 5 seconds.

How can I memorise Philippians 2:3?

To memorise Philippians 2:3, split it into its 3 natural clauses and learn one at a time. Repeat the full verse out loud five times, then write it from memory. Saving the verse as a photo wallpaper using our verse image studio helps daily review — the visual association with a memorable background dramatically improves recall.

Why does Philippians 2:3 matter in Philippians?

Philippians is Paul's joy-saturated thank-you letter from prison. It contains the great Christ-hymn (2:5-11) describing his self-emptying and exaltation, the call to rejoice always (4:4), the secret of contentment "in any and every situation" (4:11-13), and the assurance that "he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion" (1:6). Philippians 2:3 sits within this larger story — Philippians as a whole emphasises joy, humility, partnership.

How can I apply Philippians 2:3 today?

Many readers use Philippians 2:3 as a daily reminder verse — saving it as a phone wallpaper, sharing it on Pinterest, or memorising it for prayer. The verse studio on this page lets you download Philippians 2:3 on 52 different backgrounds for free. Pair the verse with the surrounding chapter context shown above to understand its full meaning before applying it.

More featured verses in Philippians 2

Read full chapter →

More featured verses in Philippians

Browse Philippians →