Colossians
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Table of Contents
<missing>
The Gospel
Bears Fruit Everywhere
Filled
with the Knowledge of His Will
The Image
of the Invisible God
In Him
Were All Things Created
<missing>
Christ in
You the Hope of Glory
The
Treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge
As You
Have Received – So Walk
Holding
Fast to Christ, Not to Angels
Relationships
in the Kingdom of God
Praying
for a Door for the Word
Fulfilling
the Ministry You Have Received
Colossians
1:5-6 LITV because of the hope being laid up for you in Heaven, which you heard
before in the Word of the truth of the gospel, (6) coming to you, as also in
all the world, and it is bearing fruit even also among you, from the day in
which you heard and knew the grace of God in truth.
Colossae was a lax, declining city, with many Jews and traders. It tended to
worship the angel Michael, who it is said, saved the city from a flood.
Overshadowed by wealthy Laodecia it was nonetheless the home of such NT
luminaries as Epaphras and Philemon. It seems to have been evangelized by
Epaphras and Timothy. Over the next few weeks we will look at key verses from
this epistle which gives some of the key teachings about Christian living, the
deity of Christ and the cruciality of the cross. Today we will look at the
"fruitful gospel".
Paul writes to the doctrinally lax and theologically laid-back Colossians and
describes the gospel as "the Word of truth" and tells them that they
"knew the grace of God in truth". Paul is saying that gospel is a lot
more than a bunch of nice. warm, fuzzy words that make good song lyrics on
Sunday morning. Paul is saying the gospel is the truth about the future - about
the real hope laid up in Heaven for those who believe.
It is true
that we will be raised from the dead, it is true that we will face judgement
and it is true that on that Day we will have hope - not despair, if we have
believed in Jesus. If it is true it cannot be replaced by an alternative
philosophy - for instance one that says we ought to worship angels. When
something is true, then it is fixed. it cannot be altered by doctrinal fads. If
there is a judgment to come, and that fact is true, then no amount of
pooh-poohing the idea of judgment will alter it. Jesus will return even if
no-one believes it at the time. Truth is like that - fixed, powerful,
unalterable. It’s like wishing Math was different when you get the credit card
bill. But it isn't - and you have to pay.
Now truth can be relied on and when the Colossians relied on it, it bore fruit.
And it started to bear fruit instantly "from the day in which you heard
and knew the grace of God in truth;". Many Christians testify to a major
change occurring at the moment of conversion. From the first moment of belief
the gospel went to work in them. God wastes no time in making His saints. The
gospel bears fruit because it is alive. Only a living tree can bear fruit and
the gospel is the gospel of Him who said "I am the Way, the Truth and the
Life". True Christian faith is quick, alive, full of sap, and bursting
with life. Deadness means that something has gone wrong, that some fundamental
disconnection from God has occurred.
The gospel
is alive and delicious - it bears fruit not cactus leaves! The gospel is
winsome with life and joy, it is not a sharp, prickly holiness or a tart,
acidic disapproving legalism. The real fruit of the gospel is in changed lives
and transformed temperaments. It’s moving from the anxious clamor of the
self-life to joyous, loving, peaceful, kind, gracious, patient, gentle, meek
and humble Christian living.
This fruitfulness comes from hearing and knowing. From hearing the gospel,
believing the gospel, and apprehending the gospel in our inner self so that we
know deeply that it is true - and its truthfulness can transform us. Hearing
and knowing is the "from faith to faith" pathway of the Christian
life. Christianity is internal, no ritual or external observance can cause us
to "hear and know". Spiritual life is not transmitted via rituals or
given in buildings nor does it flow from statues or dwell in temples. Rather
spiritual life flows from Spirit to spirit.
Spiritual
life flows to receptive people who are able to hear the gospel with their
spiritual eyes and ears and know the truth of the gospel in their hearts.
Christians
need to stop, become quiet and listen for spiritual things and then take those
spiritual truths deep into their hearts and treasure them and meditate on them.
This process of hearing and knowing the truth will cause the gospel to bear
fruit in us and may often result in instantaneous spiritual transformations.
Why do I
say instantaneous? Firstly, because Paul says "from the day you
heard" and secondly, because there is no time with God, eternal things can
happen instantly and last forever. The lame man did not slowly get well - he
jumped up. People can and do change overnight under the power of the truth of
the gospel and as we keep on "hearing and knowing' we may find
instantaneous changes happening as truth impacts our lives.
Filled With the Knowledge of His Will
Colossians
1:7-12 ASV even as ye learned of Epaphras our beloved fellow-servant, who is a
faithful minister of Christ on our behalf, (8) who also declared unto us your love
in the Spirit. (9) For this cause we also, since the day we heard it, do not
cease to pray and make request for you, that ye may be filled with the
knowledge of his will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding, (10) to walk
worthily of the Lord unto all pleasing, bearing fruit in every good work, and
increasing in the knowledge of God; (11) strengthened with all power, according
to the might of his glory, unto all patience and longsuffering with joy; (12)
giving thanks unto the Father, who made us meet to be partakers of the
inheritance of the saints in light;
As we saw in the last devotional the Colossians were good at love but poor at
truth. Paul was delighted about their "love in the Spirit" (v.8). Yet
love without truth can be misguided so Paul prays for the Colossians "that
ye may be filled with the knowledge of his will in all spiritual wisdom and
understanding...". This would cause them to a) walk worthily b) bear fruit
c) increase in knowledge d) become strong e) develop patience, and finally -
f)be thankful to God. The knowledge of God's will combined with deep spiritual
wisdom and understanding brings a solid soundness to the Christian life that it
can have in no other way. Truth enables us to see life correctly, to live and
act honorably and to bear fruit in quiet steady ways in our ministry. Truth and
wisdom give us a long-term life perspective enabling us to be strong under
trials and thankful in all circumstances. With a deep grasp of God and of
spiritual wisdom we can be overcomers in all circumstances.
What was Paul praying for when He asked for them to be "filled with the
knowledge of his will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding"? Was it
that they would all know the books of the Bible? That they would all be
bible-trivia experts? Or able to parse Hebrew? Or perhaps that they would be
able to give the "eschatological implications of a literal interpretation
of the book of Revelation" (an essay I once got set at bible college). I
don't think so.
Paul was
wanting them to know what God wanted (knowledge of His will) and how to go
about doing it in wise and spiritual ways that showed that the Colossians
deeply understood what it meant to be a Christian (spiritual wisdom and
understanding). Bible trivia and esoteric theology have little or nothing to do
with living the wise and spiritual Christian life on a day to day basis. By
nature they avoid it and locate Christianity in such questions as "who was
the shortest man in the bible" (Answer: The guard who slept on his watch)
or in arcane questions about "bible codes" that have no daily
application. Trivia and esoterica dodge around real life and thus miss out on
being "chokma" or true wisdom.
The true results of spiritual wisdom and understanding are evident in a life
that "walks worthily of the Lord, bearing fruit in every good work".
Such a life radiates God, and displays understanding. Such a life bears fruit
in the community and is a blessing to one's friends and neighbors. True
spirituality is tangible. It is not quite enough to have a good, bible
knowledge and a dozen "big visions' which never happen. You have to show
your knowledge in your living, you have to make your visions bear fruit – then
you are truly wise and truly spiritual. And we cannot rest on our laurels or
our diplomas. The truly spiritual person is a life-long learner
"increasing in the knowledge of God".
Verses 11 and 12 have a few surprises. Verse 11 begins with "strengthened
with all power, according to the might of his glory, unto..." well what
would you expect to come next? What purpose is this mighty power "all
power according to the might of His glory" going to be put to? Unto
preaching the gospel? Unto mighty works? Unto conquering the world? The answer
is "unto all patience and longsuffering with joy". The person who can
be patient and long-suffering and rejoice in all circumstances is demonstrating
the mighty power of God. God fills us with power so that we can be PATIENT.
By
definition impatient people are spiritually weak and unwise. Most of our weak
moments and foolish acts arise when we are impatient. Only the power of Christ
in us can make us strong enough to be patient, wise and noble Christians.
Finally,
the person filled with knowledge and with spiritual wisdom and understanding is
no joyless cynic. They are characterized by living "with joy; giving
thanks unto the Father". The wise person is a happy person seeing deep joy
in a world ruled by God.
This is a
contrast to the wise person in the OT Wisdom literature who is often saddened
by the world's ills and puzzled by injustice. In Christ we transcend such
despair, we know that there is love at the end. We know that the darkness will
be dealt with and that God has "made us meet to be partakers of the
inheritance of the saints in light.
Colossians
1:12-14 ASV giving thanks unto the Father, who made us meet to be partakers of
the inheritance of the saints in light; (13) who delivered us out of the power
of darkness, and translated us into the kingdom of the Son of his love; (14) in
whom we have our redemption, the forgiveness of our sins:
Christians have been made to be: in the light, out of the darkness, into the
Kingdom and in Christ's redemption. Let’s look at each of these four in turn:
Partakers
of the inheritance of the saints in light
The light is the place of visibility and purity and goodness, a place without
shadows and darkness and pain. 1 John says: And this is the message which we
have heard from him and announce unto you, that God is light, and in him is no
darkness at all. (1 John 1:5 ASV). The Good News message is about the nature of
God, the message Jesus told the apostles and which John announces is this
"God is light and in Him is no darkness at all". In God there is not
a trace of the slightest form of darkness not even grumbling, there is no
meanness, no hateful vindictiveness, no pettiness, no corruption,
unreliability, no folly. There is just pure love, pure justice, pure grace. Now
Paul says that our inheritance is "in light". It partakes of the
purity and goodness of God and of Heaven. It is utterly unsullied, pure,
undefiled, unfading and immortal, kept in heaven for us (1Peter 1:4).
Delivered
us out of the power of darkness
The darkness - Satan and his cohorts, does not have power over Christians. We
have been delivered from his power. We have been released from prison. Our
spirits first, then our souls and finally our bodies will be delivered from the
power of the Accuser and the power sin and death. We will be filled with life
and immortality and cry "Death where is thy power…". While Satan may
steal, kill and destroy and may wreck the health and marriages and finances of
Christians, his power is limited and his power is not permanent. Because we are
in Christ there will be a day when his power will not touch us at all. There
will be a day when the sin in my members will be dealt with and the battle with
sin will be over and glory will reign in my mortal body. In another sense we
sometimes are in the power of darkness - held by an addiction or enslaved by a
sin. in such cases we need to "reckon ourselves dead to sin" and
claim the fact that we are delivered from the power of darkness - no occult
force, no demon, no bondage, no sin, no fear has any right to have power over
us. We have been delivered, we are in the light, and we need to claim that by
faith.
Translated
us into the kingdom of the Son of his love
Translated means to transfer. We have been transferred from a dictatorial
enslaving kingdom of darkness to a kingdom of light and love and belovedness.
The ruler of our new Kingdom is "His Son" - Jesus and He rules with
love and mercy and grace and healing is in his wings. We are now in a safe
place. Furthermore, we are in a Kingdom that has God's love poured out on it
from its Sovereign is His beloved Son and God blesses the Kingdom of His
beloved Son. We are in a place that radiates health and well-being and security
and which casts out all fear. We are in a new Kingdom under a new way of living
that is joyous and free and grand and wonderful. We are not half-there, we are
not going there, we are already there. We "have been transferred", or
as Hebrews says "you have come to the Heavenly Zion" or as Paul says
to the Ephesians "you have been raised with Christ and seated with Him the
heavenly realms". We are already in this Kingdom - and what privileges go
with it. Matthew 11:11 GNB "I assure you that John the Baptist is greater
than anyone who has ever lived. But the one who is least in the Kingdom of
heaven is greater than John". [For more on this see my article on the
Ascension of Jesus Christ http://www.aibi.ph/articles/ascension.htm]
In whom we have our redemption,
the forgiveness of our sins.
The passage in Exodus about the slaughter of "all the first-born of
Egypt" has particular meaning for me, because I am a first-born son. The
first-born of Israel were protected by the blood of the Lamb, they were
redeemed, they were purchased back from destruction (Exodus 13:1-15). By
trusting in Jesus we are protected from the destruction of the judgment of God
on all sin. This comes at a high price, the blood of Jesus Christ, the perfect
Lamb of God. Again lets notice the past tense here - "we have our
redemption". We have got it. We do not earn it in Purgatory, we don't
attain it through a thousand good works, we have our redemption and our sins
are forgiven when we believe and this washing away of sin, which has occurred,
previously, is acknowledged in baptism. Baptism would be meaningless if our
sins were not already dealt with. We have our redemption and we have our
forgiveness because we are in Christ.
On a final note the combination of all four of the above means we are
spiritually safe from Satan's attacks. He cannot attack us with accusation
because our sins are forgiven, he cannot rule over us because we are in another
Kingdom, his dark power over us is broken and we are delivered from it, and we
now dwell in the light where he cannot come and our inheritance is there and
cannot be touched by evil. Our redemption is a marvelous work of God, wrought
in Christ Jesus, praise His name!
Colossians
1:15 ASV who is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation.
What is the relationship between an "image" of a god and that deity?
Say an image of Baal and the god Baal himself. Well, first of all, the image
was a local representation of the spirit. So you would have Baal-Somewhere and
this would be the image of that village or town or region. A bit like "the
Virgin Mary of Guadalupe", the Virgin Mary is in Heaven but her idolatrous
representation locally is down there in Guadalupe. And the idol or image does
the miracles for the local villagers providing the shrine is kept in order and
the right sacrifices are made. A little bit of the power of the deity flows
through the image. Sometimes the image also lives in a temple and if it’s a
really important image there are priests that guard access and protect the
rites and keep the Temple precincts and sort of "own" the god (and in
turn are owned by the god.) Well how does this apply to Christians? Jesus is
the image of the invisible God, who has made His nature perfectly visible to
humankind and through whom the power of God is manifest on earth. He comes to
dwell in His temple - our bodies and His church and we are His priests - all of
us. The true image of God is not a statue but Jesus Christ and His followers,
the Christians who are being made into His image (Romans 8:29-31).
Here is what Hebrews says about Jesus: "Hebrews 1:3 ASV who being the
effulgence of his glory, and the very image of his substance, and upholding all
things by the word of his power, when he had made purification of sins, sat
down on the right hand of the Majesty on high..." Jesus is the very image,
the perfect representation of the substance of God. Jesus could say
"Phillip, he who has seen me has seen the Father". But this isn't too
obvious so Paul says: "2 Corinthians 4:4 ASV in whom the god of this world
hath blinded the minds of the unbelieving, that the light of the gospel of the
glory of Christ, who is the image of God, should not dawn upon them."
Christ is the perfect image of god, but most are blind to this, they have Jesus
and God as very, very different. Jesus is nice and meek and mild and a bit
inept while God is big and speaks loudly, is easily made angry and throws
thunderbolts and yet is deep, wise and mysterious. With this dichotomy Jesus
and God are opposites. But they are not opposites - they are exactly like each
other because Jesus IS God and as Hebrews says above is "upholding all
things by the word of his power". He is the powerful image of the living,
yet invisible God and the only image we should worship.
A few days I ago I mentioned that the Colossians were noted for being led
astray by angel worship. To counter this Paul says Jesus is "the firstborn
of all creation". This does not mean that God had a wife and begot Jesus.
In fact this makes it impossible - because Jesus is the first-born of all creation
and was prior to men or women or angels. Thus there was no woman there, before
the Son of God existed. The only thing before all created things such as angels
or light or space or air - was God. So as the first-born of all creation Jesus
was God. First-born also means the heir, the important Son (in fact in this
case the only Son). In authority there is God the Father, then the first-born
Son, then all the rest of creation including the angels the Colossians
worshipped. The obvious conclusion was "why fool around with the lesser
beings when the very apex, the first-born Son, is accessible to you through
faith in Jesus Christ". As Halloween approaches, remember that calling up
the dead is as is nothing compared to calling upon the One who has risen from
the dead.
To summarize: Jesus is exactly like God, upholds the Universe by the word of
His power, existed before all the creation, is superior to the angels, has
authority as the first-born over all Creation and dwells in us as His temples
and uses us as His priests. This means the total and utter end of earthly
idols, temples and the priesthoods that guard them. The image-honoring
religious devotion of traditional religions is a powerless farce. Religion is
over. Jesus is the true image, the Holy Spirit is the only true form of Spirit
that should dwell in us, and we are the only true temple - not any building
made with human hands. Buddha, Krishna and Baal have fallen, the only true
image is Christ and He has all the power.
In Him Were All Things Created
Colossians
1:16-17 ASV for in him were all things created, in the heavens and upon the
earth, things visible and things invisible, whether thrones or dominions or
principalities or powers; all things have been created through him, and unto
him; (17) and he is before all things, and in him all things consist.
"Jesus? Ah yes, the nice mild mannered chap with the beard and sandals who
blessed small children, healed the sick, and was a good man and a prophet, yes
a very interesting religious figure in history". This is the opinion of
many and the image of Jesus in the children's bibles and the films and story
books. But this is scarcely the Jesus of Colossians, the Cosmic Christ, in whom
all creation was made. Jesus is the womb of Creation, for the Universe was
formed in Him. Out of His love and personality and thoughts and creativity
Creation came. All things, in the heavens and upon the earth, things visible
and things invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or powers,
were made in Him and were made through Him and were made for Him as their
rightful owner. He is prior to all things, "before all things", and
holds together the very fabric of life "in Him all things consist".
Jesus Christ the Son of God is superior to all angels, all spirit beings, all
kings, all thrones and dominions, and all that says it has some claim to
authority. Forget about the beard and sandals and think of the scepter.
Consider the One who sits at the right hand of the majesty on high. (Hebrews
1:1-3).
This Cosmic Christ portrayed in Colossians fascinated the Jesuit theologian
Teilhard de Chardin. He saw Christ as intimately involved in all the processes
of Creation and matter being "divinized" by Christ. Though Teilhard's
theology was unusual it contained a core truth - Creation and Christ are
closely related. Creation was made for Jesus Christ and finds its ultimate
purpose in Him. Whether it is a river or a mountain or a volcano or a frog or a
donkey or a man or a woman, we are all made for Him and our purpose in life is
bound up with Him. We are even held together by Him, and we fly apart and
person apart from Christ, the further from Christ we go, the more fractured and
alienated we become. Russian writers such as Dostoevsky and Solzhenitsyn have
made this fragmentation apart from Christ a theme of novels such as Crime and
Punishment and the essay World Split Apart which can be found at
http://www.aibi.ph/history. Harmony with Creation is only possible if we are in
harmony with Christ and moving away from our sin that wounds the world and has
brought it into bondage. (Romans 8:19-21)
Creation and Christ are so closely related that we cannot reject the Creation
and love Jesus. The creation was made for Him, not for us and we when we reject
it we reject that which He sustains and owns. Saints like Saint Francis of
Assissi have grasped this deeply and seen that Christ expresses Himself in the
birds and the trees and the goodness of the created order. The creation may be
in bondage but one day it will be freed, and when it is freed we will realize
what a glorious prisoner it was. Neither can we disregard Creation and yet find
spiritual truth. For Creation gives us many clues to the Nature of God and the
heavens declare Him (Psalm 19). Many people are surprised that so many
scientists are Christians and that the Science faculty at any university is
often where you will find the most born-again Christians. But if you love the
beauty and order and simplicity and elegance of Creation and search for its
truths you soon find yourself face to face with the mind and personality of
God. The sheer elegance of Group Theory in explaining chemistry was a powerful
influence on my own conversion in 1978. I am deeply moved by fractal geometry
and by the laws of physics and chemistry. These things spoke to me of God,
shouted it to me, even while I was a most skeptical atheist.
The intimate relationship between Christ and Creation has at times been
overstated and degenerated into pantheism (God=Creation) and pane-theism (God
dwells in all Creation). Certainly Jesus does not dwell in every rock and the
worship of Creation is not the worship of Christ, it is in fact forbidden. But
sometimes we have fled so far from these errors that we have ended up losing
our sense of beauty and balance and joy. For Creation was designed to fill you
with joy! (Isa 65:18 But be ye glad and rejoice forever in that which I create;
for, behold, I create Jerusalem a rejoicing, and her people a joy.) We cannot
throw out Creation and still have a whole and real and good faith in God. Our
faith needs to look in three directions, down into the Scriptures, up to God
and out the window into the world He created. It is then that we find balance
and peace. Mysticism without the Scriptures can become heresy and the
Scriptures without prayer can be dry and deadly and either without looking out
the window can become off-balance and even cruel. Those who hate nature or
despise their own bodies tend to maltreat other people as well. That rose bush outside
the window was made in Christ, was made through Christ and for Christ and He
even holds it together - and he rejoices in its beauty. So rejoice in what
Jesus Christ has made and praise His name, not just the man with the beard and
sandals but Him who holds all things together and for whom the stars were made!
Colossians
1:21-23 ASV And you, being in time past
alienated and enemies in your mind in your evil works, (22) yet now hath he reconciled in the body of his flesh through death, to
present you holy and without blemish and unreproveable before him: (23) if so be that ye continue in the faith, grounded and steadfast, and not
moved away from the hope of the gospel which ye heard, which was preached in
all creation under heaven; whereof I Paul was made a minister.
These
three verses we see our past "alienated and enemies", our time at the
cross "reconciled in the body of his flesh", our future "holy
and without blemish and unreproveable", and our part in the process"
if so be that ye continue in the faith, grounded and steadfast".
Firstly,
we were away from God ("alienated"), in utter opposition to God in
our deepest thoughts ("enemies in your mind") and in our practice ("in
your evil works"). This does not mean that were monsters, or unsociable,
but it does mean that we lived as if what God wanted did not matter, and when
it did matter, we opposed it. An enemy
is simply someone who puts their interests far, far ahead of your interests.
Someone will run you over if you get in their way. And when God gets in the way
of an unbeliever - they crucify Him! The cross (and the fate of the prophets)
is the very clearest expression of how people react when God becomes
inconvenient.
And where
God's will and their will come into opposition there is no thought of giving in
to God's will. If someone fully intended to cheat on an exam and I said
"Don't do that it will offend God." It would have no impact. But should I invoke their own interest and say
"Don't do that or you will be expelled." Then, and then alone they
will listen. God's interests just don't matter, (they are alienated) their
interests are all important (they are enemies).
Then, when
we repent and believe and trust in the gospel, we are reconciled. We stop
fighting with God, and He turns away His wrath from us. There is peace. We have
moved from being enemies to being sons, we are taken into the divine family.
But that is not all there is. We are made holy. We are expected to learn the
good and high ways of the sons of God. We cannot run around being criminals in
Paradise. Our filthy and wicked ways,
our grasping lusts and degrading practices are not fitting for being the sons
of light. We must get rid of them and we must clean up our act. So God gently
takes us in hand to teach us His ways and make us holy and without blemish and
unreproveable before Him. He makes us
able to behave rightly in Heaven and lovingly upon Earth.
Now it is
immediately obvious that this work of becoming holy takes some time and
involves a dogged persistence on our part. We have to fight all our unholy
impulses and put them to death. If we do not out them to death they will grow
and take us over again and sweep us away from the faith and our last fate would
be worse than our first. We would be enemies all over again, living for our own
interests and with no way back (see Hebrews 6).
We have to
stick at the work of holiness, and this means sticking to Christ and the
gospel. As we stay fixed on God, with our mind set on the things of the Spirit,
God transforms us from glory to glory and fills us with life and peace (2
Corinthians 3:17,18, Romans 8:5,6). In fact if we walk in the Spirit there is
no way we can fulfill the lusts of the flesh (Galatians 5:16-18) or be
condemned (Romans 8:1,2) or do the works of the flesh (Galatians 5:19-21) but
rather we will become full of love, joy, peace and patience and all virtue
(Galatians 5:22,23). The way forward is
simple - stay fixed on God, abide in the vine, keep the connection, be unmoved
in the faith, be steadfast in Christ. God will do the changing - but you must
do the sticking.
Colossians
1:23-25 BBE If you keep yourselves
safely based in the faith, not moved from the hope of the good news which came
to you, and which was given to every living being under heaven; of which I, Paul,
was made a servant. (24) Now I have joy
in my pain because of you, and in my flesh I undergo whatever is still needed
to make the sorrows of Christ complete, for the salvation of his body, the
church; (25) Of which I became a servant by the purpose of God which was given
to me for you, to give effect to the word of God,
Paul says
he was "made a servant" of the gospel and that he "became a
servant" of the church. That this service was by the "purpose of
God" and was "given to me" not for his own self-expression but "for
you". Furthermore, Paul says that his sufferings and imprisonment were
"for the salvation of His body, the church". Paul was pouring himself
out for the gospel and the church, right until death. Paul had apostolic
authority - but it was an authority born out of suffering and service.
As Menno
Simons, the founding father of the Mennonites said: "Spiritual authority is
never to make the rebel conform; its only purpose is to enable the obedient
person to live a holy life. Therefore it rests on obedience and submission
freely given. Furthermore, spiritual authority has only spiritual means at its
disposal; its only weapons are prayer, scripture, counsel and the power of a
holy life."
Paul's
spiritual authority was grounded, first of all, in his call. He knew that God
had appointed him to the job and that this calling was serious, high and holy.
In 1 Corinthians Paul even says: "1Cor. 9:16 For if I preach the gospel, I
have nothing to glory of; for necessity is laid upon me; for woe is unto me, if
I preach not the gospel." There was no glory - it was a duty and a
calling. It was an absolute necessity, and if he shirked it – there would be
"woe".
On the BBC
this evening there was an interview with an Israeli major who was a
"refusnik" - that is he was refusing to serve in West Bank, Gaza,
Lebanon or in the occupied territories. The BBC interviewer was quite insistent
that this was a violation of army discipline. She was right. When you serve in
the army, whether military or spiritual, you are a person under orders, a
person with a "charge" that you must keep. You have many privileges
but you also have no choice and at times you must go into places where you know
you will suffer. Paul knew this, and believed this and served the gospel.
Serving as
a missionary or a minister is not about "expressing your gifts", or
some wonderful form of self actualization that leads to green pastures and
great comfort and existential bliss. It’s about serving the gospel and serving
the church, at great cost, even to imprisonment and death. Jesus told Peter
that at the end Peter would be imprisoned and executed. "John 21:18
BBE Truly I say to you, When you were
young, you made yourself ready and went wherever you had a desire to go: but
when you are old, you will put out your hands and another will make you ready,
and you will be taken where you have no desire to go." Faithful ministry quite often takes us to
places where we "have no desire to go". It’s about serving God, even
if we end up martyred, or poor, or in a small church or without much in the way
of recognition.
Paul's
authority came because he truly was "a servant of all" (Mark 10:44 And
whoever has a desire to be first among you, let him be servant of all.) Paul
did not refuse the hard yards, or sniff at suffering, or only go where he was
admired, or only preach the gospel when it would be well received and suitably
rewarded. Paul defined his entire life as a servant of the gospel and of the
church. If we wish to be true servants of God, and have real spiritual
authority, we must do the same.
Colossians
1:26-29 ASV even the mystery which hath
been hid for ages and generations: but now hath it been manifested to his
saints, (27) to whom God was pleased to make known what is the riches of the
glory of this mystery among the Gentiles, which is Christ in you, the hope of
glory: (28) whom we proclaim, admonishing every man and teaching every man in
all wisdom, that we may present every man perfect in Christ; (29) whereunto I
labor also, striving according to his working, which worketh in me mightily.
There is
something glorious and perfect in every Christian believer - Christ in you the
hope of glory. The body is not glorious, it will grow old and perish. The mind
is not glorious, its knowledge is finite and often in error. The unredeemed
soul is not glorious as it lusts and grows angry and has numerous wayward
affections, and the various possessions we have and offices we hold do not
constitute true glory as they are passing away with this world.
Where then
is our glory? Where is that something we can hold onto, something about
ourselves that we can say "This is me, this is good and this will
last!" Something about us that is admirable - and permanently so. The only
part of us that we can point to and say "There is glory!" is our
redeemed spirit - Christ in us, the hope of glory.
Eventually
of course our redemption will be total, our bodies will be glorious (1
Corinthians 15), our minds will know all things (1 Corinthians 13) and we will
be immortal and imperishable with true eternal possessions and heavenly offices
and responsibilities. But that is not yet. And how can we know that it will be
different? That indeed glory will be ours? Because we have a foretaste and a
deposit in the Holy Spirit and a new nature in Christ.
This new
nature is glorious but in need of maturity and perfection. This is just like
the nature of Jesus who when born in the manger was perfect and innocent and
sinless and glorious but still needed to grow in stature and wisdom (Luke 2:40).
Christ in us needs to grow and he particularly needs to grow in wisdom which is
why Paul says that his task is "admonishing every man and teaching every
man in all wisdom, that we may present every man perfect in Christ."
Thus our
ultimate concern should not be earthly titles and glory, or beauty or riches
and honor and status - but the lasting glory we will have if we are mature in
Christ and wise in the things of God. Daniel, though a highly respected person
knew this and wrote: Daniel 12:2-3 ASV And many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some
to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt. (3) And they that are wise shall shine as the
brightness of the firmament; and they that turn many to righteousness as the
stars forever and ever.
If we have
Christ in us, and if we become mature in Him we shall gain the glory that is of
God and shine like the stars forever and ever. [But if we neglect this, and
despise it, and trample the things of the Kingdom, neglecting our salvation and
our calling, then the NT is full of dire warnings of weeping and wailing and
gnashing of teeth. Matthew 8:12, 13:42] Christ in you is the secret of the Christian
life, of eternal life and of heavenly glory.
Colossians 2:1-3 ASV For I would have you know how greatly I strive
for you, and for them at Laodicea, and for as many as have not seen my face in
the flesh; (2) that their hearts may be comforted, they being knit together in
love, and unto all riches of the full assurance of understanding, that they may
know the mystery of God, even Christ, (3) in whom are all the treasures
of wisdom and knowledge hidden.
Since Christ is involved in Creation and it was made through Him and
for Him and He holds all things together then He is also the wisdom in
Creation. The “Supreme Reason”, the “Cosmic Mind”, the “Universal
Consciousness” of the New Age movement is the none other than Jesus the Christ
from Nazareth. You do not need the New
Age add-ons – you just need Jesus.
In Jesus are ALL the treasures of wisdom and knowledge. All the
knowledge about the stars – for it is His Word that holds them together, all
knowledge about the future – for all things are for Him, and all knowledge of
Chemistry and Mathematics – for all things are by Him and in Him all things
consist (As we saw in chapter one of Colossians).
It’s not as if Jesus is the source of moral and spiritual knowledge
and Einstein is the source of scientific knowledge and Marx is the source of
political knowledge and Keynes is the source of economic knowledge. Not at all!
All the knowledge that can be treasured, every bit of that which is worthwhile
is found in Christ first. Then it is given to those who seek it and to those
whom He chooses to reveal it.
It is not that you can search the gospels for clues on electric
circuits. That is a very crude way of looking at it. There are no secret
physics equations hidden in the Bible or chemistry formulas in Revelation.
Rather truth opens up to the seeking mind and the inquisitive spirit that is
connected to Jesus Christ.
“Christ in you the hope of
glory” is also our hope of wisdom. The Holy Spirit can open your mind to scientific
and other truths and reveal His Universe to you. Isaac Newton openly
acknowledged this process, as have many other great scientists.
The revelation about Creation through the inspiration of the Holy
Spirit should be a vital part of the Christian life and of our discipleship. We
should constantly go to God for wisdom and expect Him to teach us many things,
if not all things (1 Corinthians 2:9-16; 1 John 2:20,27).
This is not to say that we can wander out into the desert and come
back with a Ph.D. in astrophysics. God teaches us through people, schools,
universities, churches and through books and through our own reflections. But
at the deepest level it is in our spirit we truly learn - through the ministry
of the Holy Spirit. Wisdom is spiritual and all true wisdom comes from Christ.
Colossians 2:4-7 ASV This I say, that no one may delude
you with persuasiveness of speech. (5) For though I am absent in the
flesh, yet am I with you in the spirit, joying and beholding your order, and
the steadfastness of your faith in Christ. (6) As therefore ye received
Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in him, (7) rooted and builded up in him,
and established in your faith, even as ye were taught, abounding in
thanksgiving.
Here
is the sheer simplicity of the Christian faith "as you have received Christ
Jesus the Lord, so walk in Him". There are no add-ons, no weird rituals
that make one a super-Christian. The Christian life is not a tangled philosophy
but a simple faith. It is "from faith to faith" as Paul says
elsewhere. (Romans 1:17)
The
way we started the Christian life, that is in simple faith, is the way we are
to proceed. It’s good enough for the whole journey. It is not as if you have to
first find Christ and then learn from a philosopher or theologian. Jesus is
quite sufficient. It is not as if we start with Christ and graduate to Spong.
It is Christ all the way.
There
are many persuasive speakers who will tell you that Christ is not quite enough,
or is misconstrued, and that their system brings enlightenment in some way.
This rhetoric was such a threat to the Colossian church that Paul expressly
writes to warn the early Christians away from it: "This I say, that no one
may delude you with persuasiveness of speech."
Instead
Paul was pleased with their steadfast and orderly faith and asks that they may
stand strong, not swept here and there by theological fads but established,
following what they were first taught... "joying and beholding your order,
and the steadfastness of your faith in Christ. (6) As therefore ye received
Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in him, (7) rooted and builded up in him,
and established in your faith, even as ye were taught, abounding in
thanksgiving."
Paul
believes in a received faith, a gospel that is from God, eternal, (Romans
16:25, 26; 1 Peter 1:25; Rev 14:6) fixed for all time, and not swept this way
and that by trends and fashions. Yet Paul was also a pragmatist adapting to
culture and using whatever means possible to save the lost. There is a very
real tension here. We cannot change the truth in order to please people, so
they may "accept Christ". Because if we change the gospel it is not
the real Christ that they accept but some other Christ, accommodated to the
fashion of the day.
On the
other hand we can change the way we dress or the architecture of the church,
such things are generally peripheral to the gospel message. The beliefs must be
constant, the methods can vary. Neither can we compromise on morality and
justice. We cannot wink at corruption or excuse promiscuity in the body of
Christ. The fact that all are sinners does not mean we should be anything less
than holy.
The
gospel is simple and uncluttered, a gospel from faith to faith, a gospel we can
lay hold of at conversion and follow for the rest of our days, needing neither
more nor less than Christ. We do not need philosophers or trends. We do not
need some extra add-ons. Faith in Christ is all we needed to get saved, and all
we need to be sanctified and to know and enjoy God forever.
Colossians 2:8-12 ASV Take heed lest there shall be any one that
maketh spoil of you through his philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition
of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ: (9) for in him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily, (10) and in him ye are made full, who is the head of all principality and
power: (11) in whom ye were also circumcised with a
circumcision not made with hands, in the putting off of the body of the flesh,
in the circumcision of Christ; (12) having been buried with him in baptism,
wherein ye were also raised with him through faith in the working of God, who
raised him from the dead.
As a child
did you ever played the Winnie the Pooh game where you must step in the pavement
squares and not on the lines, because if you step on the lines a bear will come
out and eat you? Did you ever get superstitious about the number 13 or walking
under ladders? Then you have felt the power of a "taboo" and the
"rudiments of the world", the basic superstitions and legalism that,
in more serious forms, governs conduct for much of the world's people.
This
phrase "the rudiments of the world" is the Greek word
"stoichion" and in its plural form "stoichea". This is
literally "the measured out things" the basic building blocks, such
as the alphabet and the numerals and very basic measurements. The very basic
orderly geometry of things. the "stepping on the squares". It is
variously translated elements as in chemical elements, first principles, and
basic principles, and is closely related to the idea of walking in an orderly
fashion or "taking steps". Thus they are the basic first steps of
wisdom and the spiritual life, the very most elementary principles - from which
we graduate when we have faith in Christ.
Galatians
says: (Galatians 4:3-10 NKJV) Even so we, when we were children, were in
bondage under the elements of the world… {9} But now after you have known God,
or rather are known by God, how is it that you turn again to the weak and
beggarly elements, to which you desire again to be in bondage? {10} You observe
days and months and seasons and years. And later in Colossians Paul writes:
(Colossians 2:15, 20-22NIV) Therefore, do not let anyone judge you by what you
eat or drink, or with regard to a religious festival, a New Moon celebration or
a Sabbath day.
....Therefore,
if you died with Christ from the basic principles of the world, why, as though
living in the world, do you subject yourselves to regulations; {21} "Do
not touch, do not taste, do not handle," {22} which all concern things
which perish with the using; according to the commandments and doctrines of
men?
The
stoichea are the old religious principles - shrines, feasts, taboos and
festivals. They include priests, temples, diets, rituals and the trappings of
religiosity from which Christ has freed us. (For more on this see my free ebook
Temples and Tithes http://www.aibi.ph/tt/) These religious taboos were
associated with various principalities and powers. For instance it was
forbidden to play the pan-pipes at noon as that was the god Pan's rest time and
he could not be disturbed than and would curse anyone who played his pipes at
that hour. Animistic religions are still full of these superstitions and taboos
that bring down curses from one or more gods for the violation. However,
because Christ has ascended through the heavenlies and taken captivity captive
we are now freed from all such bondage.
Christ has
undoubtedly been raised and is far beyond the rule of all principalities and
powers and out from under the Law and all religious regulations. But what about
us? Let’s look at verse 12: "having been buried with him in baptism,
wherein ye were also raised with him through faith in the working of God, who
raised him from the dead." We are raised with Christ! We are, spiritually
speaking, a son of God and "up there with Jesus!" Paul says this very
clearly in Ephesians 2:6: "and raised us up with Him, and seated us with
Him in the heavenly places, in Christ Jesus". You and I are seated with
Christ in heaven - far above all legalism taboos, Sabbaths and religious
requirements.
We have
graduated from being slaves to sons, we no longer have the spirit of fear,
guarding ourselves carefully lest we break some taboo, but rather we are sons
and cry out "Abba Father". We don't have to have a kosher kitchen to
keep meat and dairy products separate, we can eat pork, we don't need to be
circumcised, and we don't have to observe a long calendar of religious feasts
so God will be happy with us. Just believing in Jesus is enough to make God
happy with us! We don't have to walk around afraid that, in some spiritual
sense, we have "trodden outside the squares" and that the bears will
come and eat us! God has not made us to
dwell in religious dread - but in peace!
Colossians 2:9 KJV For in him dwelleth all the fullness of
the Godhead bodily.
Jesus is God and is fully God, despite being in human form. God is not
limited to being a certain size. He can be fully present in a single point, or
fill the Universe. This means He can be fully present in a human body. Thus Jesus is the fullness of the Godhead in
a human body.
The human body is so designed that it is meant to be God-indwelt. When
God breathed into Adam and he became a living soul, it was God's
self-impartation of the divine nature, the image of God. We were always meant to be God-breathed
creatures. The New Testament calls us temples of the Holy Spirit. Your human body is designed primarily to be a
dwelling place for God. This is what makes
sexual immorality so wrong, we cannot take the temple of God and defile it. The
body was not made for sexual pleasure as its chief purpose and highest aim - we
are not sex objects but sacred sites - temples of the Holy Spirit. (see 1
Corinthians 6)
The human body of Jesus contained the fullness of the deity from the
moment of conception. In an extraordinary moment, John the Baptist in the womb,
recognized Jesus in the womb and leaped for joy! (Luke 1:44) The presence of
God gave Him extraordinary wisdom as a child and caused Jesus to be without sin
in any respect. Jesus was a holy God dwelling in a perfect man.
Jesus was the perfection of our ability to be indwelt by God. He was the whole Godhead, dwelling in a
perfect temple, in an uninterrupted and complete abiding. John the Baptist recognized this. The Old
Testament prophets had an "on again, off again" relationship with the
Holy Spirit. The word of the Lord came to them, then went, and then came again
another day, and they could put a time and date to these moments when God fully
inspired them. This was not so with Jesus. John recognized Jesus as the one on
whom the Holy Spirit came - and remained. (John 1:32, 33) Jesus was the ideal
home of God. The Spirit never had to leave, the Spirit remained, because Jesus
was perfectly holy.
Jesus was God in a perfect temple, in a sin-free human body, and full
of grace and truth. Jesus could honestly say: John 14:9 ASV Jesus saith unto
him, Have I been so long time with you, and dost thou not know me, Philip? He
that hath seen Me hath seen the Father; how sayest thou, Show us the Father?
The human body cannot just be God-indwelt, it can also be indwelt by
demons and in the last days an Anti-Christ will arise who will be Satan in
human form, the Devil incarnate. Thus our bodies are battle-grounds. The Devil
wants to dwell in them and God wants to dwell in them. In Christ, God had
perfect control of a human body. In Christ, God dwelt fully and revealed
Himself most clearly.
This presents us with a choice. Do we surrender the members of our
body to the indwelling Christ, or the control of the lusts of the flesh and the
seduction of demons? Do we make ourselves, our hand, our feet, our voice,
instruments of righteousness - or do we become instruments of iniquity? Do you
see yourself as a sacred site, a temple, a holy being, a God-breathed humanity?
Because you should! God has died to cleanse you, redeem you and indwell you.
You are not just common clay. If you are a Christian, then you are a
mini-Christ and a God-indwelt human being.
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Eternity 94 - The Work of
the Cross
Colossians 2:11-15 ASV in whom
ye were also circumcised with a circumcision not made with hands, in the
putting off of the body of the flesh, in the circumcision of Christ; (12) having been buried with him in baptism, wherein ye were also raised with
him through faith in the working of God, who raised him from the dead. (13) And you, being dead through your trespasses and the uncircumcision of
your flesh, you, I say, did he make alive together with him, having forgiven us
all our trespasses; (14) having blotted out the bond written in
ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us: and he hath taken it
out that way, nailing it to the cross; (15) having despoiled the principalities
and the powers, he made a show of them openly, triumphing over them in it.
(Colossians 2:11-15 NIV) In 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,
{12} having been buried with him in baptism and raised with him through your
faith in the power of God, who raised him from the dead. {13} When you were
dead in your sins and in the uncircumcision of your sinful nature, God made you
alive with Christ. He forgave us all our sins, {14} having canceled the written
code, with its regulations, that was against us and that stood opposed to us;
he took it away, nailing it to the cross. {15} And having disarmed the powers
and authorities, he made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by
the cross.
The cross is not just a symbol
of a sacrifice, or a piece of jewelry but a place where spiritual work was done
and a place where transformations are accomplished. The work of the cross is
radical, total and eternal.
In Colossians 2:11-15 the cross does seven things:
1. Deals with our old sinful nature:
ASV "ye were also circumcised with a circumcision not made with
hands, in the putting off of the body of the flesh, in the circumcision of
Christ;"
NIV "In 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,"
2. Accomplishes a spiritual death to that part of us that loved evil:
"having been buried with him in baptism". (both ASV &
NIV)
3. And giving us a new nature that is high and holy and alive:
ASV "wherein ye were also raised with him through faith in the
working of God, who raised him from the dead."
NIV "and raised with him
through your faith in the power of God, who raised him from the dead."
4. And moves us from spiritual death to spiritual life - which is a
life with Christ:
ASV "And you, being dead through your trespasses and the
uncircumcision of your flesh, you, I say, did he make alive together with
him,"
NIV "When you were dead in your sins and in the uncircumcision of
your sinful nature, God made you alive with Christ."
5. And grants us forgiveness of sin, all our sins, forever nailed to
the cross and dealt with:
ASV "having forgiven us all our trespasses; (14) having blotted
out the bond written in ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to
us: and he hath taken it out that way, nailing it to the cross"
NIV He forgave us all our sins, {14} having canceled the written code,
with its regulations, that was against us and that stood opposed to us; he took
it away, nailing it to the cross.
6. Removing all ground of accusation against us and this robbing Satan
of any power to accuse us or triumph over us. With our sins forgiven Satan has
no ammunition to use:
ASV "having despoiled the principalities and the powers",
NIV" having disarmed the powers and authorities,"
7. The cross thus triumphs over
evil and the demonic world, the spiritual realm and all taboos and curses:
ASV "he made a show of them openly, triumphing over them in
it."
NIV "he made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by
the cross."
The cross in Colossians is
about a transition between old nature and new nature, death and life, guilt and
forgiveness, and between subservience to spirits and complete victory over them
and their taboos. In the Old Testament, and in the pagan religions, God was
scary and unapproachable except by a spiritual elite. But such mediation is not
necessary if our sins are completely dealt with. The fact that the powers and
principalities no longer "have any ammunition" and that we have
"died to" them and their world, means that all the old religious
regulations that kept the Gentiles in fear and trembling are now powerless. The
old religious systems for dealing with a dangerous deity are now void of
meaning. All the rules about new moons, festivals, Sabbaths, diets, oblations,
sacrifices, vows and all the curses and spells and invocations and temples and
shrines and priests and charms and holy days and offerings and robes and taboos
and fears are just swept aside. We have died on the cross and they are
powerless over us.(see verses 16-23 of Colossians 2) We have been raised with
Christ to a realm where they simply cannot apply. Paul is saying that the old
religious realm is finished. Faith in the cross has made dealing with God a
safe thing to do.
back to top
(Colossians 2:16-23 NKJV) So
let no one judge you in food or in drink, or regarding a festival or a new moon
or Sabbaths, {17} which are a shadow of things to come, but the substance is of
Christ. {18} Let no one cheat you of your reward, taking delight in false
humility and worship of angels, intruding into those things which he has not seen,
vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind, {19} and not holding fast to the Head,
from whom all the body, nourished and knit together by joints and ligaments,
grows with the increase that is from God. {20} Therefore, if you died with
Christ from the basic principles of the world, why, as though living in the
world, do you subject yourselves to regulations; {21} "Do not touch, do
not taste, do not handle," {22} which all concern things which perish with
the using; according to the commandments and doctrines of men? {23} These
things indeed have an appearance of wisdom in self-imposed religion, false
humility, and neglect of the body, but are of no value against the indulgence
of the flesh.
In these verses a false spirituality and a true spirituality are contrasted.
The false spirituality is a "shadow of things to come" and worships
angels and is full of rules about "new moons and Sabbaths' and regulations
about what can be tasted, touched and handled. The true spirituality is the
substance, and holds to Christ the Head, and grows with a growth that is from
God and is grounded in the previous discussion of the cross.
Angels had a prominent place in pre-Christian religion. The OT Law was
ordained by angels (Acts 7:53, Galatians 3:19, Hebrews 2:2) and they had a
prominent role in its administration. On the other hand the Gentiles had
religions administered by demons - that is by fallen angels.(1 Corinthians
10:20,21). As this is a rather unusual
topic I have included the references in full below.
The Jewish Law was appointed through angels and administered by it:
(Acts 7:53 NKJV) "Who have
received the law by the direction of angels and have not kept it."
(Galatians 3:19 NKJV) What
purpose then does the law serve? It was added because of transgressions, till
the Seed should come to whom the promise was made; and it was appointed through
angels by the hand of a mediator.
(Hebrews 2:2 NKJV) For if the
word spoken through angels proved steadfast, and every transgression and
disobedience received a just reward,
Angels were even involved in punishing those who disobeyed the Law:
(Exodus 23:20-21 NKJV) "Behold, I send an Angel before you to keep you in the way and to
bring you into the place which I have prepared. {21} "Beware of Him and
obey His voice; do not provoke Him, for He will not pardon your transgressions;
for My name is in Him.
Gentile religions sacrificed to fallen angels - that is to demons:
(1 Corinthians 10:20-21 NKJV) Rather, that the things which the Gentiles sacrifice they sacrifice to
demons and not to God, and I do not want you to have fellowship with demons.
{21} You cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of demons; you cannot
partake of the Lord's table and of the table of demons.
The book of Hebrews opens with the contrast between the system based
in Christ the Son of God (Christianity) and the system based on the
administration of angels (Judaism). Hebrews chapter one shows that Christ is
superior to angels in every way. Hebrews chapter 2 shows that angels
administered the Law of Moses and thus since Christ was higher than the angels
so Christianity is a much better way than Judaism. Colossians 2 is a briefer
form of the same argument. The spirituality based in the administration of good
angels (the Law) or bad angels (the Gentile religions) is inferior to that
based on the true Head which is Christ and from which all true spiritual life
flows.
The administration by angels follows a certain structure - high
priests, temples, sacrifices, new moons, Sabbaths, taboos, dietary restrictions.
So there would be a temple for Yahweh and a temple for Zeus, a high priest of
Yahweh, and a high priest of Zeus etc. The forms were basically the same
whether Jew or Gentile. But in Christ all these old forms are done away with
because the angelic layer of mediation is done away with and we have risen
beyond that administration (of angels, principalities and powers) to sit with
Christ. (see Ephesians 2-4)
This radical difference in spiritual authority and the transition
between the Old Testament and the New is commented on by Jesus when He talks
about John the Baptist. (Matthew 11:11-13 NKJV) "Assuredly, I say to you, among those born of women there has not
risen one greater than John the Baptist; but he who is least in the kingdom of
heaven is greater than he. {12} "And from the days of John the Baptist
until now the kingdom of heaven suffers violence, and the violent take it by
force. {13} "For all the prophets and the law prophesied until John.
The astounding spiritual fact is that the least born-again Christian
is "greater than" John the Baptist and all the OT saints! Why?
Because we are born of God and seated in heavenly realms with Christ. This
great status is not deserved but is a promotion by grace that will display
God's goodness to sinners. (Ephesians 2:5-8 NKJV) even when we were dead in
trespasses, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved),
{6} and raised us up together, and made us sit together in the heavenly places
in Christ Jesus, {7} that in the ages to come He might show the exceeding
riches of His grace in His kindness toward us in Christ Jesus. {8} For by grace
you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift
of God,
Thus Christians who go back to the old religious structures of
priests, temples etc are acting as if they were still under angelic
administration and thus deny what God has done for them in Christ. In Galatians
Paul says that this going back to old religious requirements such as festivals
and circumcision can even imperial our salvation (Gal 4:9-11, 5:1-11) To go
back to all those rules and regulations is to let go of our spiritual Head -
Christ and to let an angelic and priestly structure be our head instead. This
has occurred to a great extent in traditional Roman Catholicism which is
greatly compromised. These old religious
structures may seem wise (verse 23) but are of no use in restraining the flesh.
Only born-again, Christ-centered, Spirit-filled Christian faith is effective in
bringing self-control and spiritual freedom.
Why then do Christians cave in to observe festivals and Sabbaths and
religious taboos? Because someone "judges them" and criticizes them,
demanding they observe this holy day or this dietary rule and on face value
that person seems authoritative, traditional and wise. Thus Paul exhorts us:
"So let no one judge you in food or in drink, or regarding a festival or a
new moon or Sabbaths, {17} which are a shadow of things to come, but the
substance is of Christ." We are not to cave in to those who demand
submission to their rules and regulations. We are to cling to Christ alone -
who is the true substance of our faith.
Colossians
3:1-4 ASV If then ye were raised together with Christ, seek the things that are
above, where Christ is, seated on the right hand of God. (2) Set your mind on the things that are above, not on the things that are
upon the earth. (3) For ye died, and your life is hid with Christ
in God. (4) When Christ, who is our life, shall be
manifested, then shall ye also with him be manifested in glory.
Born-again
Christians are ascended saints. We have been "raised with Christ", we
are where He is, we are seated in the heavenly realms with Him. We have died to
this world. We are corpses to materialism, fame, sensuality and earthly glory.
We are dead to what others seek here on earth and we have another life. Our
life is Christ.
If you are
denied a promotion - don't worry, your life is not in that promotion, it is in Christ.
If your wedding is postponed or cancelled, remember your life is not in that
person, your life is in Christ. If your house is burgled and your bank account
cleaned out - do not worry your life is not in money and possessions it is in
Christ. That may sound severe but is
what Paul means.
I am
trying to deal with Philippine Customs and bring a donated second-hand
duplicator into the country for my ministry. Fully half of my entire ministry
budget is being demanded as bribes and "charges". I have tried four
different brokers to no avail. The actual customs duties are only a few dollars
- the rest are service fees and "paperwork" charges. Is my life in a duplicator or in my ministry
budget? No. It’s in Christ. It’s humiliating and painful and makes me angry,
but its "just stuff".
I feel
like I am being eaten by those who neither fear God or man. Part of me wants to
lash out. The better part of me says "this is small stuff, this belongs to
the earth, in a thousand years time that duplicator won't matter but who you
became in response to it will".
I have to set my mind on things above. I have
to get beyond the frustrations of this life and set my mind on Christ. My life
is not even in my ministry. It is in Jesus. How can I use this situation to
grow in Him? How can I use this to grow in maturity? How can I use this to
display Christ?
When Jesus
returns and we are manifested with Him in glory, in the full Romans 8 liberty
of the sons of God, then I will realize my life was not in an office or a
duplicator or my ministry success or my ministry budget or in a computer - but
in Him. I will realize that my
"real life", the substance of my existence, the expression of my true
nature, is Christ.
Am I an
ascended person or an earthly person? How do you react in a Christ-like way to extortion,
bribery and corruption? I have to go back to who I really am in Jesus - an
ascended saint, a son of God, a dweller in Zion. That should dictate the rest.
I need to set my mind on God and His deliverance not on the earth and the
situation.
In short I
need to live out of the ascension - not out of the contention. I need to remind
myself that my life is in Christ, that I am in Christ and that my actions and
reactions must flow from there as well. Whatever your life, whatever your
frustrations, the centre is to be the heavenly throne, our mind is to be set
above, and our life is to be Christ alone. And if we choose to live the life of
an ascended saint, of a true Christian, then when Christ appears we will be
glorified with Him.
Colossians
3:5-10 ASV Put to death therefore your
members which are upon the earth: fornication, uncleanness, passion, evil
desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry; (6) for which things' sake cometh
the wrath of God upon the sons of disobedience: (7) wherein ye also once walked,
when ye lived in these things; (8) but now do ye also put them all away: anger,
wrath, malice, railing, shameful speaking out of your mouth: (9) lie not one to another; seeing that ye have put off the old man with his
doings, (10) and have put on the new man, that is being
renewed unto knowledge after the image of him that created him:
Some preach that we can pray a prayer of
commitment to Christ then sin all we like because we are forgiven. That is not
the Scriptural position. When we believe we are made new, we are given a new
self, a new creation that is righteous. This new self is a "new man"
and lives a new life. It has new standards and they are holy. Thus conversion
involves a radical break with the life of sin and an eager entering into a life
of holiness.
The
"New Man" lives a new life, doing new things, thinking new thoughts,
speaking new words and behaving in new ways consistent with Heaven where he
dwells and Christ who he serves, and the Lord in whose image he is made.
As
"ascended saints" we are citizens of Heaven, and are seated in
heavenly realms with Christ, our life is hidden in Christ with God, and we will
one day will judge angels (1 Cor 6:2, 3). Hebrews even says that Jesus is
"not ashamed to call us brethren" (Hebrews 2:10-13). We are a high
and holy and sanctified people so we must put away those things which are
earthly, carnal, obscene, and degrading.
Internet
pornography must be renounced, along with fornication, passion and evil desire.
Greed and covetousness and sweaty scheming is setting up an idol in your heart.
So put it to death. Swearing and abusing must not come out of our mouths.
Nastiness,
malice, hatefulness, spite and petty jealousy and gossip must be seen for what
they are - utterly un-Christlike and unfitting for the born-again Christian.
We have
put off the old man. He was crucified when we found Christ, we died to sin
(Romans 6) and we now live to God. Therefore let us not lie to one another but
tell the truth in honest relationships full of integrity and trust.
Sin is not
a light thing. God gets angry at it. It brings His punishment, His wrath,
"for which things' sake cometh the wrath of God upon the sons of
disobedience". But if we are in
Christ and following Christ our lives will be characterized by obedience and
holiness and we will walk in the light. We will act like a son of God, not a
son of disobedience.
We have
put on the new man and he is in the "image of Him who created him"
that is in the image of God. Our new self is a direct creation of God, and is
in the image of Jesus Christ. When Jesus returns and is revealed we will find
out that we are "like Him" (1 John 3:1-3, Col 3:1-4). Day by day we are "being renewed"
by the work of the Holy Spirit.
Tit
3:5 not by works done in
righteousness, which we did ourselves, but according to his mercy he saved us,
through the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Spirit,
2Co 4:16 Wherefore
we faint not; but though our outward man is decaying, yet our inward man is
renewed day by day.
The old
must go. The renewing of our life into holiness and truth and grace is the true
eternal direction of our existence. We are not here to indulge the senses or be
enslaved to passions but to become like Christ. Therefore put to death the old
and focus fully on the new, the holy and the good.
(Colossians 3:15-17 NIV) Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts,
since as members of one body you were called to peace. And be thankful. {16}
Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly as you teach and admonish one
another with all wisdom, and as you sing psalms, hymns and spiritual songs with
gratitude in your hearts to God. {17} And whatever you do, whether in word or
deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father
through him.
The
Kingdom of God is a lifestyle of "righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy
Spirit" (Romans 14:17) and that is what Paul is describing here in
Colossians.
Firstly,
Paul calls us to being at peace with one another: "Let the peace of Christ
rule in your hearts, since as members of one body you were called to
peace.". This is the corporate peace of Christians in loving unity. (This
verse is often taken out of context to refer to about personal peace in
guidance issues). We are to create a community in unity that experiences God's
Shalom peace and wholeness. Division an squabbling is not appropriate since we
are "one body" and our fundamental calling is "to peace".
Three
times Paul calls the Colossians to a life of gratitude and thankfulness - in
verses 15, 16 and 17. Gratitude is one of the keystones of Christianity and one
Catholic author has written a book called "Gratitude The Heart Of Prayer". Our right relationship to the
creator Christ of Colossians chapter one means we must be grateful for all He
has made.
Frustration
and obstruction can eat away at our spiritual lives - so we need to learn to be
thankful in the midst of life's irritations. Where I live in Palanan in Manila,
Philippines, we have been having frequent blackouts. In the middle of doing
something the computer screen goes blank, the light goes out, the fan stops and
a silence descends - today it went from 9:30am to 5pm - effectively wasting an
entire day. How do you be thankful for an irregular power supply? I took the
opportunity to journal, to have a mini-retreat and to start on marking some
papers. I turned it into thankfulness for a "nice quiet day".
The heart
is the center of the Christian life and where all the big battles are fought.
And our hearts are to be full of four things - God's Word, wisdom, song and
gratitude. "Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly as you teach and
admonish one another with all wisdom, and as you sing psalms, hymns and
spiritual songs with gratitude in your hearts to God."
God's
word, the word of Christ, is to dwell in us richly - producing fruit and
Christian character. In order for this to happen we need to be taught, and we
need to be wisely admonished by mentors and disciplers. We need the personal
one-to-one exhortation that touches us at our core and helps us see our blind
spots and what we need to work on.
This
teaching and admonishing is an every member function. It’s a "one
another" command. It’s not just the pastor's job, It’s everyone's job. The
husband can teach and admonish his wife and the father can teach and admonish
his children and the wife can wisely instruct the husband and the bible study
leader the group and friends can encourage and exhort each other in the faith.
Music is a
big part of the Christian life - but let's not just leave it to the experts on
stage! Paul would have even "groaners" like me sing for joy to the
Lord! (Once, when I was young and singing in the shower the tune was so bad
that my father rushed out of his bedroom thinking I was dying!) Despite our
different talents, Paul assumes we all will be making music! "as you sing
psalms, hymns and spiritual songs with gratitude in your hearts to God."
The Christian life is supposed to be a happy life of singing and joy and
worship in the Holy Spirit.
Even our
work life and the washing up and mowing the lawn is to be soaked with praise!
"And whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of
the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him." The whole of our words and deeds are to be
done from gratitude to God in Christ.
This is
the Kingdom lifestyle - abounding in love, rejoicing in all things, filled with
the word of Christ and singing songs! A life lived in a community in harmony
dwelling in God's Shalom peace. That might be a long way from your experience
or mine but if we let the Holy spirit fill us and guide us, if we launch out on
it anyway, we can start to bring it to pass, in us, in our homes, in our bible
study groups, our church and eventually in our city or town.
(Colossians 3:18-4:1 NKJV) Wives, submit to your own husbands, as is
fitting in the Lord. {19} Husbands, love your wives and do not be bitter toward
them. {20} Children, obey your parents in all things, for this is well pleasing
to the Lord. {21} Fathers, do not provoke your children, lest they become
discouraged. {22} Bondservants, obey in all things your masters according to
the flesh, not with eyeservice, as men-pleasers, but in sincerity of heart,
fearing God. {23} And whatever you do, do it heartily, as to the Lord and not
to men, {24} knowing that from the Lord you will receive the reward of the
inheritance; for you serve the Lord Christ. {25} But he who does wrong will be
repaid for what he has done, and there is no partiality. Masters, give your
bondservants what is just and fair, knowing that you also have a Master in
heaven.
The
Kingdom of God is a place of respectful, loving and fair relationships. These
relationships have a certain order that is intrinsic to them. When this order
works well there is joy and peace. When this order goes wrong we sense it very
deeply and call it either "disrespectful" or "abusive".
Disrespectful relationships include rebellious and contentious wives, disobedient
children and lazy, pilfering servants. Abusive relationships include harsh
unloving husbands, domineering fathers and exploitative bosses. They are all
covered in the above verses.
Behind all
these relationships lies God. The Lord is impartial, the Master of the masters
and the rewarder of the slaves. God is the one that demands that wives submit
to their husbands and that children obey their parents and masters treat their
slaves fairly. These sort of relationships are often not covered by civil laws,
and civil laws can even undermine them - granting too much power to employers
or funding the disobedience of rebellious children. Regardless of what laws may
or may not be in place God has an order for human relationships and expects us
to obey it.
Submission
and obedience are rather politically incorrect terms these days. In the Greek
submission means to "dwell under" and is more about being a good team
player than a robot. Wives are to be good team players with their husbands, not
pulling this way and that, being argumentative or always demanding their own
way. Husbands in their turn are to forgive their wives, love their wives and be
understanding and tender in their regard for them.
The
workplace requires a similar team spirit and an eagerness to do the job well,
not slackly, and not " as little as possible". So Paul writes:
"Bondservants, obey in all things your masters according to the flesh, not
with eyeservice, as men-pleasers, but in sincerity of heart, fearing God." Throughout the OT and especially in Proverbs
diligence and wisdom is praised along with hard work. There is a Christian work ethic and it
involves a sincere desire to excel. But the desire to please the boss must not
be just for flattery or promotion but out of self-respect and fear of God.
The same
fear of God should place limits on our obedience at work. Even if your boss
wants you to take bribes or fiddle the books, you must not do so. Paul takes
pains to emphasize that we serve not men, but God. He says that: We are to work
"fearing God" (v.22), to the Lord (v23), for we serve the Lord Christ
(v.24) and we also have a Master in heaven (v.25)
The above
intrinsic order in Christian relationships sets the Christian community into a
proper and appropriate harmony. Paul uses the term: "as is fitting in the Lord" (v.18).
The word fir fitting ("aneko") means to be appropriate and proper.
God delights when the Christian community functions properly in respectful
love. The obedience of children to parents is "well pleasing to the
Lord". (v.20) and obedient servants do not go unnoticed by God. In fact
their obedience to earthly masters has heavenly results - it will lead them to
receive the reward of the inheritance (v.24).
Finally,
Christian relationships are to be hearty and full. "And whatever you do,
do it heartily, as to the Lord and not to men." (v.23). Yesterday we saw
that we are to do all things thankfully giving glory to God (Colossians 3:17).
Today we see we are to do them heartily and energetically as positive people
living full, thankful and joyful lives. The Kingdom order is never bland or
insipid. Tepid, lukewarm living is repulsive to God: (Revelation 3:16 NKJV)
"So then, because you are lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will vomit
you out of My mouth." The
apathetic, Lazy-Boy, Coke and chips world of the spectator Christian is not a
New Testament lifestyle. We need to live fully, heartily, thankfully and
positively with enthusiastic energy in our work and in all our Kingdom
relationships.
(Colossians
4:2-6 NKJV) Continue earnestly in
prayer, being vigilant in it with thanksgiving; {3} meanwhile praying also for
us, that God would open to us a door for the word, to speak the mystery of
Christ, for which I am also in chains, {4} that I may make it manifest, as I
ought to speak. {5} Walk in wisdom toward those who are outside, redeeming the
time. {6} Let your speech always be with grace, seasoned with salt, that you
may know how you ought to answer each one.
Watch and pray! "Continue earnestly in
prayer, being vigilant in it with thanksgiving". We are not to be sleepy
unguarded Christians but alert watchmen, seeing the world around us and
bringing the forces of heaven to bear through prayer. We are like artillery
spotters scanning the horizon and then precisely directing the spiritual fire
to the appropriate spot long before the forces of wickedness can pose a real
threat to the church.
In our
prayerful vigilance we are not to lose our spiritual poise or surrender to
vague apprehensions, fears and paranoias. Wild rumors and anxious imaginings do
not help the cause of spiritual warfare but rather makes it seem foolish and
bizarre. So Paul adds the phrase
"with thankfulness". We are to be a thankful and positive people,
strong warriors, grateful guards of the Kingdom of God. Our vigilance is to be
a cheerful alertness. We are to remain positive in the strife.
The
Colossians were not only to pray for themselves but for Paul and for the
progress of the gospel: "meanwhile praying also for us, that God would
open to us a door for the word, to speak the mystery of Christ, for which I am
also in chains, {4} that I may make it manifest, as I ought to speak."
Though Paul was in prison he had not given up hope of ministry and was
requesting prayer that he be able to witness in jail.
Paul was
not asking for the prison door to be opened (though he did ask for prayers for
his release in other places). Rather he was asking for a "door for the
word", an opportunity for the gospel. In the midst of a dark dungeon Paul
wanted to manifest the mystery of Christ, to declare in apostolic power the
presence of the Kingdom of God!
Paul's
desire to minister, even in prison is an illustration of a greater principle -
using time well for God. Paul calls it "redeeming the time" turning
evil times, persecution and prison into opportunities for the gospel. He tells
the Colossians to think carefully about their relationships with non-Christians
and to consider how they can be best used to share Christ. "Walk in wisdom
toward those who are outside, redeeming the time."
Redeeming
the time is not just about having "good time management" it’s about
having "godly time management". It’s about making every encounter and
every minute, a "divine encounter" and a redeemed minute. To cleverly
plan the time for adultery or to time a bank-robbery to the milli-second, is
not redeeming the time. It simply being efficiently wicked. We need to look at
our calendars with the two great commandments in mind and ask "How can I
best use my time to love God" and "How can I best use my time to love
my neighbor". (Maybe less TV and more visiting people?)
Paul's
first clue in time management is speech management! It’s making every word
count. According to John Maxwell the average worker spends 70% of their day
communicating. If each word is spoken with grace and seasoned with salt - what
a difference it would make! When we meet non-Christians what is our speech
like: Angry? Turbulent? Gossiping? Trivial? Profane? Let’s make it full of
grace and truth, gracious enough to be winning and salty enough to make an
impact.
Lastly, we
are to put our brains into gear before opening our mouths. We are to think
about the person and their needs. Instead of formulas and sales pitches we are
to "answer each one" as individuals, knowing their spiritual needs
and the proper response. The evangelist Charles Finney said there were
different kinds of non-Christians - hardened, curious, awakened and convicted I
think were the categories. The hardened needed a sharp awakening to the reality
of God - often in the form of suffering. The curious needed more information
and to come to see that the gospel applied to them personally. The awakened
were aware that the gospel applied to them but were dithering about commitment
and needed exhortation to "do business with God". The convicted were
those who were under the deep work of the Holy Spirit and simply needed the
plan of salvation presented clearly to them and they would accept. People are
at different places spiritually and need you to talk to them at their point of
need.
Let’s ask
God to open the door for us to proclaim the gospel - even if our circumstances
are adverse - and also that God may have grant us the wisdom and the discipline
to take advantage of every opportunity that comes our way.
Colossians
4:7-11 NKJV) Tychicus, a beloved brother, faithful minister, and fellow servant
in the Lord, will tell you all the news about me. {8} I am sending him to you
for this very purpose, that he may know your circumstances and comfort your
hearts, {9} with Onesimus, a faithful and beloved brother, who is one of you.
They will make known to you all things which are happening here. {10} Aristarchus
my fellow prisoner greets you, with Mark the cousin of Barnabas (about whom you
received instructions: if he comes to you, welcome him), {11} and Jesus who is
called Justus. These are my only fellow workers for the kingdom of God who are
of the circumcision; they have proved to be a comfort to me.
The
greetings at the end of Paul's epistles give us fascinating glimpses into the
community life of the early church. The early church generally did not have
church building but consisted of city-wide networks of converted synagogues,
house-churches and prayer cells. The persecuted saints met in catacombs and
tunnels in Rome and beside river-banks in Philippi. These city-wide networks of
Christian cell groups were in turn networked by travelling teachers of the Word
such as Paul, Apollos, Titus, Timothy, Epaphras etc.
The
messengers would bring news about how Paul's trial was going, the latest
epistle, and set things straight in the local church ensuring that the same
practices were observed throughout. If you have ever played the mental game of
figuring out "how many handshakes" you are away from someone famous
you will realize how interconnected we are and how well networks work. For
instance I am "three handshakes" away from the U.S. President , having shaken the hand of my
local member of Parliament in Australia, who has shaken the hand of the
Australian Prime Minister John Howard who has in turn shaken the hand of
President George.W. Bush. I am sure that all of us can claim something similar.
In the
early church no-one was more than three handshakes from Jesus! Jesus had direct
contact with the twelve and Paul (and many others), these then directly trained
senior leaders, who set in place the city elders, who then governed the church.
Say you were a Christian in far-away Crete. The Lord Jesus appointed Paul who
then appointed Titus, who then set elders in every city in Crete, who then took
care of the Christians there.
In
addition to this direct chain of command many of the Christians would be visited
from time to time by an apostle. For instance the church in Ephesus was visited
by both Paul, and John. And Jerusalem, Antioch and Rome were visited by nearly
everyone! This means that any major deviation in faith or practice was quickly
spotted and corrected by a direct disciple of Jesus or someone that the
apostles appointed. Major incidents would travel directly back to the apostles
who would correct them in the next epistle or on a personal visit (see 2 John,
3 John and Philemon).
Tychicus
and Onesimus come with news from Rome. Onesimus is probably the runaway slave
of Philemon on his journey back to his master, Tychicus was probably his
protector in the delicate negotiations. Tychicus was an "Asian"
convert and was with Paul for many years and travelled it seems to Tome, Crete,
Ephesus and Colossae as well as Laodecia. His last mention is when he takes over
the church in Ephesus, freeing up Timothy to be with Paul in Rome (2 Timothy
4:9, 21).
Another
companion was the risk-taking, eventual martyr Aristarchus. Here is the entry
on him in the International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Aristarchus
ar-is-tar'-kus
(Aristarchos, "best ruler"): He was one of those faithful companions
of the apostle Paul who shared with him his labors and sufferings. He is
suddenly mentioned along with Gaius as having been seized by the excited
Ephesians during the riot stirred up by the silversmiths (Act_19:29). They are
designated "men of Macedonia, Paul's companions in travel." We learn
later that he was a native of Thessalonica (Act_20:4; Act_27:2). They were
probably seized to extract from them information about their leader Paul, but
when they could tell nothing, and since they were Greeks, nothing further was
done to them.
When
Aristarchus attached himself to Paul we do not know, but he seems ever after
the Ephesian uproar to have remained in Paul's company. He was one of those who
accompanied Paul from Greece via Macedonia (Act_20:4). Having preceded Paul to
Troas, where they waited for him, they traveled with him to Palestine. He is
next mentioned as accompanying Paul to Rome (Act_27:2). There he attended Paul
and shared his imprisonment. He is mentioned in two of the letters of the Roman
captivity, in the Epistle to the church at Col. (Col_4:10), and in the Epistle
to Phm. (Phm_1:24), in both of which he sends greetings. In the former Paul
calls him "my fellow-prisoner." According to tradition he was
martyred during the persecution of Nero.
This has got long enough! I will continue tomorrow with a look at Mark, the cousin of Barnabas.
Colossians
4:10-14 LITV (10) Aristarchus, my fellow
prisoner, greets you, also Mark the cousin of Barnabas, about whom you received
orders. If he comes to you, receive him. (11) And Jesus, the one being
called Justus, those being of the circumcision, greet you, these only fellow
workers for the kingdom of God, who became a comfort to me. (12) Epaphras greets you, he of you, a slave of Christ, always striving for
you in prayers, that you may stand full-grown and being complete in every will
of God. (13) For I bear witness to him, that he has much
zeal on your behalf, and those in Laodicea, and those in Hierapolis. (14) Luke the beloved physician greets you, also Demas.
This
passage opens with a note of reconciliation "Mark the cousin of Barnabas,
about whom you received orders. If he comes to you, receive him."
Mark, otherwise known as John Mark set out
with Paul and Barnabas on the first missionary journey only to turn back once
they left his home ground of Cyprus. There is much speculation about why Mark
left but the reason was not one that pleased Paul. The phrase "separating
from them" in Acts 13:13 may imply some sort of an argument.
Paul was
sufficiently unimpressed to not want to take John Mark along in Acts 15 and
Mark seems then to have gone to serve with the Apostle Peter. Over time the
well-known breach was repaired and here, some ten years later, Paul tells the
Colossians to welcome him. He joins Philemon in being "now useful".
(2 Timothy 4:11. Philemon 1:11)
Epaphras
is an intercessor "always striving for you in prayers, that you may stand
full-grown and being complete in every will of God." Epaphras sees the
maturity of believers as the main focus of prayer - and indeed this topic is
also the focus of many of the prayers of Paul.
The
greatest thing we can help produce is a man or woman of God. Therefore the
greatest thing we can pray for is that our fellow believers will become men and
women of God. Like Epaphras we should pray that they will become mature in
Christ and that their Christ-likeness will be evident to the glory of God.
Epaphras
did not take prayer lightly but was "always striving" - he prayed with
passion and agony and power and persistence. How can we pray like that? First
pray for the right things, the things of the Kingdom, then just keep on
praying. Pray long, pray often, pray always. Nothing teaches prayer like
praying. Pray at home, pray in prayer groups, pray at church, pray at work,
pray on the bus, keep a prayer list on you at all times, just keep praying. Persistence
and practice will prove powerful in prayer.
Epaphras
had a BIG prayer vision - "he has much zeal on your behalf, and those in
Laodicea, and those in Hierapolis." Epaphras just didn't pray for his own
place, but also for the mission outposts and other churches. This was a passion
in him, a burning zeal for the state of the church in those areas. Let’s not
just pray for our own churches but also for missionaries and for those that the
Lord gives us a burden for.
Finally we
come to Luke and Demas. "Luke the beloved physician greets you, also
Demas." What a contrast! Luke stuck with Paul through thick and thin,
while Demas loved the world ( 2 Timothy 4:10)! Luke gets the appellation
"the beloved physician" while Demas gets no commendation at all. Demas
the disappointment, Luke the true friend in Paul's last hour he would write to
Timothy "only Luke is with me". (2 Timothy 4:11).
In these
few verses we see Mark who made a mistake then recovered and Demas whose
mistake was final. We see characters like beloved Luke and passionate Epaphras
and a few ordinary hard-working saints. These verses tell us we have a life
course, determined by character and forged at certain decisive turning points.
Life is not trivial, who we turn out to be really does matter. No-one really
cares if Demas bought a big house if he lost his chance of spiritual greatness
in the process and no-one worries about Mark's mistake if he bounced back again
into Christian service.
Christian
service can forge us a great character or display our worldliness for all to
see. Who are you going to be like? Will you pray the price?
Colossians
4:15-18 LITV (15) Greet the brothers in Laodicea, and Nymphas and the assembly
in his house. (16) And when this letter is read before you, cause that it be
read also in the Laodicean assembly, and that you also read the one of
Laodicea. (17) And say to Archippus, Look to the ministry which you received in
the Lord, that you may fulfill it. (18) The greeting by my hand, Paul. Remember
my bonds. Grace be with you. Amen.
These
verses have caused New Testament scholars much anguish..where is the lost
epistle to the Laodicean church? There must be many of Paul's writings that
have not been preserved. Perhaps the Laodiceans were so "lukewarm"
that they did not bother to treasure it!
Again we
get a glimpse into church life in the NT. The church met in houses "and
Nymphas and the assembly in his house" across a city such as Colossae or
Laodecia. Obviously in these places there would be many more believers than
could fit in one house so there were probably many house-churches networked
together with elders in each city acting as supervisors of the cell groups just
as Paul told Titus to set in place elders in each city.
The city networks each then get an epistle
which is read in the various cell groups, and perhaps, where possible at large
gatherings. The city-churches are networked across regions such as Asia. The
epistles are passed around with the Laodecians getting to read the Colossian
epistle and vice-versa. So individuals belong to cell-churches, which belong to
city-churches, which have elders and leadership and which are networked across
regions. It was a pattern not unlike the Internet in its ability to communicate.
The
authenticity of the epistles was guaranteed by Paul's apparently distinctive
signature "The greeting by my hand, Paul". One theory is that Paul
had an eye ailment (Galatians 4:13-15) that caused him to write in large
letters (Galatians 6:11) and have rather unique handwriting. "2
Thessalonians 3:17 LITV (17) The greeting of Paul by my hand is the sign in
every letter; so I write.". The eye ailment caused Paul to use a scribe
known as an amanuensis to do the writing at Paul's dictation for most of the
letter with only the signature being added by Paul. The scribe for the epistle
to the Romans apparently was one Tertius who added his own greeting "Rom
16:22 I, Tertius, the one writing the epistle, greet you in the Lord."
In the
midst of these final greetings Paul adds an exhortation to Archippus. Archippus
is addressed in Philemon as "a fellow-soldier" meaning a Christian
worker. This is confirmed here where he is addressed as one having received a
ministry in the Lord. He was probably the brother of Apphia, the wife of
Philemon. According to Lightfoot this family of Onesimus, Philemon, Apphia and
Archippus were all stoned to death during the reign of Nero. (Source
International Standard Bible Encyclopaedia)
Archippus
was told to "Look to the ministry which you received in the Lord, that you
may fulfill it." Whether tiredness, discouragement or apathy or some
distraction had overtaken Archippus we do not know. Rather we know what he was
to do next - to pay attention to his ministry to fulfill it. Not to wander away
into other things.
"Look
to the ministry which you received in the Lord" means firstly that
ministry is not a choice, it is not something we choose to do or not do. It is
a precious gift which we receive from God and should pay attention to. Paul
even said "woe unto me if I do not preach the gospel". Ministry is
not something we can forget about when it gets tough or put aside when fame and
fortune beckon. A ministry is a destiny and we should fulfill it.
There are
three things we should pay attention to in ministry. The first is our own
character and the second is our doctrine and teaching of the word of God.
"1Ti 4:16 Give attention to yourself and to the doctrine; continue in
them, for doing this, you will both deliver yourself and those hearing
you." The third is the quality, diligence and Christ-centeredness of our
ministry "take heed how you build" (1 Cor 3:10-15). We are to be holy, we are to be scriptural
and we are to be focused, diligent and centered on the gospel.
It’s easy
to think that one's ministry is "so small it doesn't count" and to
feel that if you give up no-one will notice. But Paul did notice! He had an eye
on his fellow-soldier and pulled this one back into the ranks and into service.
If you have a ministry - pay attention to it, look to it, put your energy into
it. Do you supervise others? Then encourage them to stay on task!
John
Edmiston
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