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Warning Colossians
2:1-12 In
composing this delicate letter to people he has never met, Paul is at some pains
to explain why he is interested in them at all.
If you think of all the energy expended in various church factions –
and how little result – you should understand the reason.
If you are concerned with extending your own power and authority, you
cannot write this type of letter. On
the other hand, Paul is confident in his authority:
Apostle to the Gentiles. As
always happens within the Paul’s
struggles for the Colossians 1I want you to
know how much I am struggling for you and for those at We
are rather accustomed to telling someone, “I will pray for you.”
Often we say this because we have a desire to help – but there seems to
be no other way. Prayer for someone
else is what we do when we’re out of options.
As such, it tends to get lazy. Have
you ever had anyone offer to struggle in prayer for you?
That’s what Paul tells the Colossians (and Laodiceans, and others) that
he has been doing for them. He
struggles for the church he loves. There
are two things he goes after:
Why
these two? We may see this in
a variety of situations, but here are three: Desired
Result All
this is so that his readers might know “the mystery of Christ.”
It was veiled to the Jews, hidden from the Gentiles – but now is
revealed to the world. That mystery
is the coming of Christ. Christ,
the Word of God, is now to be our source of knowledge and wisdom.
At first glance this seems absurd; despite
the ravings of some of our more fundamentalist brothers, the Bible is not a
science textbook.[1]
It’s much too important to be that.
In it we find the wisdom that guides us and the knowledge that gives us
eternal life – and we find this nowhere else. The
importance of starting well Paul
praises his readers for two things:
That
last is important. When you begin to
systematically put things together, that’s when you begin to understand the
whole of them. For example, suppose
you were the world’s first butterfly collector.
At first you would have only the most beautiful ones you could catch.
But after some time you’d begin to get curious;
just how many are there? Are
there others in other lands? What
part does their coloration play in their lives?
Order and method, careful observation would answer those questions,
eventually. So it is with Christ.
Be diligent and orderly in your study of him, and you will be greatly
rewards. There
is one warning in this: the
deception of worldly philosophy. By
his praise Paul tells these people they are on the right track – now just keep
going that way. Christian
Growth 6So then, just as
you received Christ Jesus as Lord, continue to live in him, 7rooted
and built up in him, strengthened in the faith as you were taught, and
overflowing with thankfulness. 8See to it that
no one takes you captive through hollow and deceptive philosophy, which depends
on human tradition and the basic principles of this world rather than on Christ. The
operating word in this passage is “continue.”
You have it right, just keep practicing it.
You received Christ as Lord, now continue to live in him. Paul
uses an agricultural phrasing here: it is reminiscent of Jesus talking of the
true vine and its branches. It’s
worth another look. Living
in Him
If
you do this, Paul tells us, you will soon be overflowing with thankfulness.
At first glance that seems a little odd.
But let me offer you a parable. Suppose
you are driving a large truck – in a snowstorm.
You’ve already put the tire chains on, but the snow is deep and
treacherous. Along comes the snow
plow. As it goes by, you fall in
behind him and put your wheels into his track.
That can be difficult, but as long as you’re doing that, you know the
truck will keep moving. At first
that’s difficult, but as you get the hang of it, you begin to feel pretty
grateful to the guy driving that snowplow. Especially
if you’re a new truck driver who’s never driven a truck in snow before. Responsibility Again,
Paul warns us that we are responsible for telling the fake from the real.
There will be plenty of fakes. How
do you know who they are?
The
Fullness of Christ 9For in Christ
all the fullness of the Deity lives in bodily form, 10and
you have been given fullness in Christ, who is the head over every power and
authority. 11In him you were also
circumcised, in the putting off of the sinful nature,£
not with a circumcision done by the hands of men but with the circumcision done
by Christ, 12having been buried with
him in baptism and raised with him through your faith in the power of God, who
raised him from the dead. The
argument, you see, is very simple. You’ve
been given a gift from God – the fullness in Christ.
Since in Christ all the fullness of God lives, you can see that this is a
very precious gift indeed. Understand
what this word “fullness” means. It’s
a Greek word which carries with it the idea that you have all you need for
whatever purpose it refers to. In
this instance, Christ is all we need for our salvation and resurrection. We
have been given Let’s
take this one step at a time:
The
fullness of Christ How
has God the Father given fullness to Christ?
Consider this passage from Hebrews, chapter 5: 8Although he was
a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered 9and,
once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey
him 10and was designated by God to
be high priest in the order of Melchizedek. He
became perfect (i.e., perfectly suited for the task) by suffering. In
so doing, God has granted him all authority in heaven and on earth.
If you are a Christian, you acknowledge that authority.
Indeed, we call upon the Lord for salvation.
We do so in baptism – a type of burial and resurrection. Please,
note two things, both past tense:
When
you started on this adventure called Christianity, you called upon the power of
God to save. That power is still
there; we need only to keep the
faith.
[1] Go read 2 Timothy 3:14-17 again. It says nothing about being a science textbook. There are more important things at stake here. |