Day 167, Colossians 1 
This letter is
very much like Paul's letter to the Ephesians---who lived just 100 miles
from the Colossians in modern western Turkey. In fact, Paul wrote this
letter around the same time that he wrote his Ephesian letter, during his
house arrest in Rome. Both letters were carried to their intended recipients by
the same man, Tychicus (Eph. 6:21; Col. 4:7), who also carried Paul's letter to
Philemon, which is next on our reading list.
This letter was
intended to have a limited circulation among the Gentile saints in Colossae and
nearby Laodicea (4:16), to whom Paul had also written a letter at the same
time, and of which we have no copy. It primarily was intended to
counteract false teachings that had infiltrated the Colossian church in the
first century, yet it contains truth that can also counteract more modern doctrinal
errors.
One of those
modern errors is the idea that Jesus suffered for our sins in hell, and thus
purchased our redemption after three days of burning in flames. Paul writes,
however, that Jesus "made peace through the blood of His cross"
(1:20) and "reconciled you in His fleshly body through death" (1:22).
When Jesus cried out from the cross, "It is finished" (John 19:30),
He meant it. The full penalty for our sins was paid on Calvary.
Another modern
doctrinal error debunked in today's reading is what is often referred to
as unconditional eternal security, or once-saved-always-saved. Paul wrote to
the Colossians:
He has
now reconciled you in His fleshly body through death, in order to present you
before Him holy and blameless and beyond reproach---if indeed you continue in
the faith firmly established and steadfast, and not moved away from the hope of
the gospel that you have heard (1:22-23).
Notice the very
conditional "if" in what we just read. We must "continue in the
faith firmly established and steadfast" if we expect Christ to present us
before God "holy and blameless and beyond reproach." This makes
perfect sense, because we are saved through faith. The one who abandons faith
in Jesus Christ forfeits his or her salvation, not meeting God's conditions.
Yet another modern
doctrinal error that is exposed in today's reading is the dethroning of the
Lord Jesus Christ to make Him something less than He is. It seems that within
many circles of professing Christians, Jesus is little more than a cosmic
vending machine or self-help guru. Bible Jesus' preeminence and
all-sufficiency are highlighted by Paul in 1:15-20. Jesus "is the image
of the invisible God" (1:15), the one who created the material and
spiritual worlds for Himself.
He existed before everything, and is the supreme head of the church who
reconciled us to God. That is an entirely different Jesus than the one so
popular today, epitomized in a song sung by the Doobie Brothers in the 1970s
hit, "Jesus is Just Alright (with Me)." A speck of dust approves of
the Creator of all things! How comforting that must be to God! The real issue
is, "Are you just alright with Jesus?"
Amazingly, all-supreme
Jesus lives in everyone who believes in Him (by the Holy Spirit), and His
indwelling is our "hope of glory" (1:27). That is, because of His
glorious presence within us, we have hope of living eternally in His glorious
kingdom.
What is the goal of
spiritual wisdom and understanding? To enable us to "walk in a manner
worthy of the Lord, to please Him in all respects, bearing fruit in every good
work" (1:10). Spiritual knowledge that does not result in godly behavior
is worthless at best and spiritually damaging at worst if it fosters
pride. Paul's goal in teaching was to "present every man complete in
Christ" (1:28).
Paul wrote that he was
doing his share of filling up that which was lacking in Christ's afflictions
(1:24). He was certainly not implying that he was personally finishing the work
of Christ's atonement, but simply that the church, Christ's body, always
suffers persecution, just as Christ did. When we read of what Paul
actually did endure for the sake of the gospel, our sufferings generally
pale by comparison. Consequently, so will our rewards.
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