Adressing @AlQuemist's comment concerning a physical answer, I'd like to mention the concept of mean-field instability (where $\bar{\varphi}$ from @Wakabaloola's post would be the mean-field). As an illustration, consider the following (complex) model action:
$$
S = \int \mathrm{d}t\; \left\{\sum_{\alpha=1,2}\left[ \phi_{\alpha}^{*}i\partial_t\phi_{\alpha}^{} - \tfrac{U}{2} \left| \phi_{\alpha}^{}\right|^{4} \right] -J(\phi_{1}^{*} \phi_{2}^{} + \phi_{2}^{*} \phi_{1}^{}) \right\}.
$$
This could for example describe cold atoms in a double-well potential, with a coherent coupling $J$ and a contact interaction $U$. Following the procedure sketched by @Wakabaloola, that is, calculating
$$
\left.\frac{\delta \Gamma[\phi_\alpha, \phi_\alpha^*]}{\delta\phi_\alpha^*}\right|_{\phi_\alpha=\Phi_\alpha,\; \phi_\alpha^*=\Phi_\alpha^*}=0,
$$
one can derive two so-called Gross-Pitaevskii equations
\begin{align}
\begin{split}
i\partial_ t \Phi_{1}^{} &= J \Phi_{2}^{} + U \left| \Phi_{1}^{}\right|^{2} \Phi_{1}^{}, \\
i\partial_ t \Phi_{2}^{} &= J \Phi_{1}^{} + U \left| \Phi_{2}^{}\right|^{2} \Phi_{2}^{},
\end{split}
\end{align}
which are the "classical" equations of motion in the sense discussed above ($\bar{\varphi} \equiv \Phi_\alpha$). Setting the complex mean-fields to $\Phi_{\alpha}^{} = \sqrt[]{N_{\alpha}}e^{i\theta_{\alpha}}$, these are equivalent to
\begin{align}
\begin{split}
\dot{z} &= 2J\,\sqrt[]{1-z^2}\sin{\theta}, \\
\dot{\theta} &= NUz - 2J\frac{z }{\sqrt[]{1-z^2}}\cos{\theta},
\end{split}
\end{align}
where $ N = N_1+N_2 = \mathrm{const.}, z = (N_1 - N_2)/N, \theta = \theta_2 - \theta_1$. See also reference [1], where they give the analogy of a classical non-rigid pendulum described by these two equations.
Now we want to address the question of the stability of this mean-field by looking for the fixed points of these equations. Evidently, a set of fixed points is given by $(z^*,\theta^*) = (0, n\pi)$, where $n$ indicates multiples of $\pi$ and the asterisk signifies the fixed point ($z$ and $\theta$ are real). Let's restrict to the specific point $(z^*,\theta^*) = (0, \pi)$ [2]. The Jacobian of the two equations evaluated at this point is
\begin{align}
\mathcal{J}(0, \pi) =
\begin{pmatrix}
0 & 2J\\
NU - 2J & 0
\end{pmatrix},
\end{align}
which has eigenvalues
\begin{align}
\lambda = \begin{cases}
\pm \, 2Ji\,\sqrt[]{|\Lambda-1|},\quad \Lambda < 1, \\
\pm \,2J\,\sqrt[]{\Lambda-1},\quad \Lambda > 1.
\end{cases}
\end{align}
We have defined $\Lambda = NU/2J$. For $\Lambda > 1$, the eigenvalues are evidently real, which means we have a so-called hyperbolic fixed point. The crucial point is now this: Whenever we are in the vicinity of an unstable fixed point ($\mathrm{Re}\,\lambda > 0$), the mean-field description is known to fail completely. One can prove this, for example, by including fluctuations into the description, which turn out to be large precisely under this condition. Connecting to @Wakabaloola's post, this is where one would have to take into account higher contributions in $\hbar$ with $l>0$.
What we have described is a dynamical instability for a system that has the classical analogy of a pendulum. The physical picture emerging is simple: the point $(0, \pi)$ is like the one where the pendulum is "upside down". Importantly, the non-linearity coming from the interaction is responsible for the existence of this fixed point. For "small" interactions ($\Lambda < 1$), the non-linearity stabilizes this point, and one gets non-trivial stable oscillations that are reasonably well described by the mean-field. When the interaction becomes larger ($\Lambda > 1$), the stability breaks down, and (quantum) fluctuations become relevant. Intuitively, this has to do with the fact that within the unstable regime, the slightest perturbation can make the pendulum topple over in an arbitrary direction ("spontaneous symmetry breaking"). In order to be able to predict this direction, one would have to know "everything" about the randomness entering via the quantum fluctuations. Whenever fluctuations are dominant, one is in the "non-perturbative" regime, where only highly sophisticated resummation techniques involving infinitely many diagrams can be employed (at best).
[1] Smerzi, A., Fantoni, S., Giovanazzi, S. and Shenoy, S.R., 1997. Quantum coherent atomic tunneling between two trapped Bose-Einstein condensates. Physical Review Letters, 79(25), p.4950.
[2] Vardi, A. and Anglin, J.R., 2001. Bose-Einstein condensates beyond mean field theory: Quantum backreaction as decoherence. Physical Review Letters, 86(4), p.568.