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Colossians 1:21-23 Commentary |
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Colossians
1:21 And although you
were
(PAPMPA)
formerly
alienated
(RPPMPA) and
hostile in
mind
engaged
in
evil
deeds (NASB:
Lockman)
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Greek:
Kai
humas
pote
ontas (PAPMPA)
apellotriomenous
(RPPMPA)
kai
ecthrous
te
dianoia|
en
tois
ergois
tois
ponerois,
Amplified: And although you at one time were estranged and
alienated from Him and were of hostile attitude of mind in your wicked
activities, (Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
KJV: And
you, that were sometime alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked
works, yet now hath he reconciled
NLT: This includes you who were once so far away from God. You
were his enemies, separated from him by your evil thoughts and
actions, (NLT
- Tyndale House)
Phillips: And
you yourselves, who were strangers to God, and, in fact, through the
evil things you had done, his spiritual enemies (Phillips:
Touchstone)
Wuest: And
you who were at one time those who were in a settled state of
alienation, and hostile with respect to your intents in the sphere of
your works which were pernicious, (Eerdmans)
Weymouth: And you, estranged as you once were and even hostile
in your minds, amidst your evil deeds,
Young's Literal: And you--once being alienated, and enemies in
the mind, in the evil works, yet now did he reconcile |
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AND ALTHOUGH YOU WERE FORMERLY
ALIENATED: Kai humas pote ontas (PAPMPA)
apellotriomenous (RPPMPA):
(Col
2:13-note, Eph 2:1-note,
Ep 2:12-note,
Ep 4:18-note
Ro 8:7,8-note
1Co 6:9, 10,11 Titus 3:3, 4-note,Titus
3:5, 6,7-note)
Were (5607)
(on) is the
present tense
of eimi which
means our continuous state was alienated from God.
Alienated
(526) (apallotrioo
from apó = marker of dissociation implying rupture of
former association -- emphasizes idea of separation + allotrióo = alienate) means to alienate entirely, be alien
or estranged. Webster adds that alienate means to to
make unfriendly, hostile, or indifferent where attachment formerly
existed.
Apallotrioo is
in the
perfect tense and
passive voice
and indicates that something happened to all men in the past to
cause them to be estranged (cf Ps 51:5 -
Spurgeon's note,
Ro 5:12-note) from God and that
condition has persisted (perfect tense). All men were born "little sinners"
and persist in that condition because -- perfect
tense speaks of permanence.
In other words we were in a
continual state of separation, alienation and estrangement from God
because of the "sin virus" we inherited from Adam. Paul explained
how we contracted the "fatal" disease writing that...
just as through one man sin
entered into the world, and death through sin, and so death spread
to all men, because all sinned (see note
Ro 5:12)
Now believers have been
transferred to another owner.
Apallotrioo is used only two other times, both also by Paul...
Ephesians 2:12 (note) remember
that you were at that time (as Gentiles, heathens, before
you became believers) separate from Christ, excluded (utterly alienated - apallotrioo) from the
commonwealth of Israel, and strangers to the covenants of
promise, having no hope and without God in the world"
Comment: An
alien is one who does not “belong.” He is a stranger and
foreigner, without the rights and privileges of citizenship. As
far as the community of Israel was concerned, the Gentiles were
on the outside, looking in.
Ephesians 4:18 (note)
being
darkened in their understanding, excluded from the life of God,
because of the ignorance that is in them, because of the
hardness of their heart
Belonging to the race of Adam,
we are born alienated from God. Then as individuals, we each choose to
accept and embrace that alienation with our wicked works.
Apallotrioo is
used in the
Septuagint (LXX) where
David explains that
The wicked are
estranged (apallotrioo) from the womb. These who
speak lies go astray from birth." (Ps 58:3 -
Spurgeon's note)
David's point is
that their corruption is not a development of later life but can be
traced back to their birth - they were alienated and estranged from
birth. Their lawlessness and rebellion are inborn, so that as men
begin to talk, they begin to lie! They don't have to be taught!
In Ezekiel
God says that
the hearts of the house of Israel...are estranged
(apallotrioo) from Me through all their idols. (Ezek 14:5-note)
Formerly (4218)
(pote) means once or formerly. Once we were all
alienated. Now that we are in Jesus, we are no longer alienated. The
difference between a believer and a non-believer isn't merely
forgiveness, but includes a complete change of status of the
relationship between God and man.
AND HOSTILE IN MIND: kai echthrous te dianoia: (Ro
5:10-note,
Jas 4:4-note
Titus 1:15-note,
Titus 1:16-note)
Before we were
saved by grace through faith...
(We were) enemies (echthros)
(and) we were reconciled to God through the death of His Son, much
more, having been reconciled, we shall be saved by His life. (Ro 5:10-note)
(We had our) mind set on the flesh
(which) is hostile (echthra)
toward God; for it does not subject itself to the law of God, for it
is not even able to do so (Ro 8:7-note)
(We were friends) with the world
(which) is hostility (echthra)
toward God. Therefore whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes
himself an enemy of God. (James 4:4-note)
Hostile (2190)
(echthros
from
échthos = hatred, enmity - [see also
echthra = enmity]) means (in the active sense) to be
hateful, hostile toward, at enmity with or adversary of someone. In
the passive sense echthros pertains to being subjected to hostility,
to be hated or to be regarded as an enemy. An enemy is one that is
antagonistic to another; especially seeking to injure, overthrow, or
confound the opponent. Scripture often uses echthros as a noun
describing "the adversary", Satan! Like father like son!
Echthros
- 32 times in the NT - Matt. 5:43, 44; 10:36; 13:25, 28, 39; 22:44;
Mk. 12:36; Lk. 1:71, 74; 6:27, 35; 10:19; 19:27, 43; 20:43; Acts 2:35;
13:10; Rom. 5:10; 11:28; 12:20; 1 Co. 15:25f; Gal. 4:16; Phil. 3:18;
Col. 1:21; 2 Thess. 3:15; Heb. 1:13; 10:13; Jas. 4:4; Rev. 11:5, 12
We were all
enemies of God, we acted toward Him in rebellion,
and therefore we all needed to be reconciled to God. There would be no
hope without the removal of His wrath and our rebellion. Hostility must be removed from
man if reconciliation is to be accomplished. God took the initiative
in bringing this about through the death of his Son.
Jesus used echthros in the parable of the tares writing
that
the enemy (echthros) who sowed them
(referring to the "tares" --Satan has a counterfeit for every divine
reality and sows the world with those who look, talk and act like
disciples but who are not genuine followers of the King) is the
devil, and the harvest is the end of the age (referring to the end
of this present age and precedes the next age, the 1000 year reign of
Messiah) and the reapers are angels." (Mt 13:28)
Mind (1271)
(dianoia
[word study]
from from
dianoéomai = to agitate in mind in turn from dia =
separation + noeo = to think over from nous = the
faculty of thinking) refers to the understanding or the the mind
activated and refers to the higher intellectual nature, especially on
the ethical side. It
means thinking through something, meditating, reflecting. It refers to
the intellect, moral understanding or the way of thinking. It is the
faculty of thinking, comprehending, and reasoning. Dianoia is
the seat of perception and thinking, the faculty of understanding,
feeling, desiring. In the
Septuagint
dianoia is often used to translate
heart. Cremer defines dianoia as "the faculty of moral
reflection."
Dianoia -
12 times in the NT - Mt. 22:37; Mk. 12:30; Lk. 1:51; 10:27; Eph. 2:3;
4:18; Col. 1:21; Heb. 8:10; 10:16; 1 Pet. 1:13; 2 Pet. 3:1; 1 Jn. 5:20
Paul uses
this same noun dianoia to describe unbelievers in Ephesians
writing that...
Ephesians 2:3
(note) Among them
(unbelievers) we too all formerly lived in the lusts of our flesh,
indulging the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by
nature children of wrath, even as the rest
Ephesians 4:18
(note) being darkened in
their understanding, excluded from the life of God, because of
the ignorance that is in them, because of the hardness of their heart;
TDNT
writes that dianoia is the...
common word for “thought” has such
varied senses as (1) thought as a function, (2) the power of thought,
the thinking consciousness, (3) the way of thought, (4) the result of
thought, e.g., thought, idea, opinion, or judgment, (5) resolve of
intention, and (6) the meaning of words or statements. The
LXX
uses it as an equivalent of
kardia, and the usage is much the same in other Jewish works. (Kittel,
G., Friedrich, G., & Bromiley, G. W. Theological Dictionary of the
New Testament. Eerdmans)
It is a tragedy to see men created in the image of God
(Genesis 1:27, 9:6) use their minds actively against God.
There was a time when all of us who are now Christians were alienated
from God. We did not have any use for God. We did not take Him into
our reckoning. We did not consider Him important. We started and ended
each day without a thought of Him. We went about our own plans, lived
for ourselves, and did what we felt like doing, never giving a thought
to God. Or if we did think of Him, we regarded Him as merely a remote
Being on the horizon of life, but we never expected anything from Him.
Because we cut Him out of our thinking---even though He was sustaining
our very life---we ended up, as Paul describes, "enemies in our
minds," hostile toward God. We did not want anything to do with Him.
You remember how that felt, don't you? We avoided God. We thought He
would interfere with our plans or that He was a cosmic killjoy out to
make us live uneventful and unhappy lives. We were not open to Him in
any degree whatsoever. We were enemies of God, and as a result we
expressed that enmity in evil deeds.
IN EVIL DEEDS: en tois ergois tois ponęrois: (John
3:19, 20, Ro 1:21-note,
Ro 1:22, 23-note,
Ro 1:24, 25-note,
Ro 1:26, 27-note,
Ro 1:28-note,
Ro 1:29, 30, 31-note, 32-notes)
Were...engaged in evil deeds
- Literally we were continually in evil,
engaged and deeds added by the translators for amplification.
The preposition "in" (Gk = en) pictures our former unregenerate
state as in the sphere of evil. Evil was the "air we inhaled" and
"breathed out". Evil is the medium in which we conducted life and
work. All our thoughts, words and deeds were permeated, even
"marinated" as it were, in the elixir of evil! An ugly picture
indeed! See
Torrey's Topical list summarizing the Character of
Evil people.
Evil (4190) (poneros
from ponos = labor,
sorrow, pain)
(see related word
poneria)
describes evil in active opposition to good and that which corrupts
others. It means actively
harmful, hurtful, evil in effect or influence.
Poneros - 78 times in the NT -
Matt. 5:11, 37, 39, 45; 6:13, 23; 7:11, 17f; 9:4; 12:34f, 39, 45;
13:19, 38, 49; 15:19; 16:4; 18:32; 20:15; 22:10; 25:26; Mk. 7:22f;
Lk. 3:19; 6:22, 35, 45; 7:21; 8:2; 11:13, 26, 29, 34; 19:22; Jn.
3:19; 7:7; 17:15; Acts 17:5; 18:14; 19:12f, 15f; 25:18; 28:21; Rom.
12:9; 1 Co. 5:13; Gal. 1:4; Eph. 5:16; 6:13, 16; Col. 1:21; 1 Thess.
5:22; 2 Thess. 3:2f; 1 Tim. 6:4; 2 Tim. 3:13; 4:18; Heb. 3:12;
10:22; Jas. 2:4; 4:16; 1 Jn. 2:13f; 3:12; 5:18f; 2 Jn. 1:11; 3 Jn.
1:10; Rev. 16:2
That sounds as
though evil behavior is the cause of inner alienation and hostility
toward God. But it is quite the other way around. It is inner
alienation, estrangement from God and hostility toward Him, that
causes evil behavior. That is what the Greek text clearly states.
In short, Paul is indicating the avenue through which hostility in the
mind is revealed and made known. Hostile purpose finds natural
expression in evil deeds with a malicious intent! Satan is the Evil One (tou ponerou
- Ep 6:16-note). And since we were in his family
prior to being in Christ...like father, like son! We were only doing
what ''pleased'' our father, so to speak, realizing that the flesh by
itself has quite enough lust (epithumia)
to carry out active evil (poneros) even w/o the Devil (Re
10:8, 9, 10-see
notes
Re 20:8;
20:9;
20:10
regarding Gog and Magog)
In the parable of sower, Jesus
used the word poneros to describe Satan, the evil
one [who] comes and snatches away the good seed
of the Word that is sown in the heart of a hearer (Mt 13:19)
Poneros was used by Jesus
to
describe the scribes and Pharisees (Mt 12:34). Jesus instructs
disciples to pray for deliverance from evil (poneros) in
Matthew 6:13 (see note).
Torrey's
Topic
Character of the Evil
Abominable -Revelation 21:8
Alienated from God -Ephesians 4:18; Colossians 1:21
Blasphemous -Luke 22:65; Revelation 16:9
Blinded -2 Corinthians 4:4; Ephesians 4:18
Boastful -Psalms 10:3; 49:6
Conspiring against God’s people -Nehemiah 4:8; 6:2; Psalms 38:12
Covetous -Micah 2:2; Romans 1:29
Deceitful -Psalms 5:6; Romans 3:13
Delighting in the iniquity of others -Proverbs 2:14; Romans 1:32
Despising the works of the faithful -Nehemiah 2:19; 4:2; 2 Timothy
3:3,4
Destructive -Isaiah 59:7
Disobedient -Nehemiah 9:26; Titus 3:3; 1 Peter 2:7
Enticing to evil -Proverbs 1:10-14; 2 Timothy 3:6
Envious -Nehemiah 2:10; Titus 3:3
Fearful -Proverbs 28:1; Revelation 21:8
Fierce -Proverbs 16:29; 2 Timothy 3:3
Foolish -Deuteronomy 32:6; Psalms 5:5
Forgetting God -Job 8:13
Fraudulent -Psalms 37:21; Micah 6:11
Froward -Proverbs 21:8; Isaiah 57:17
Glorying in their shame -Philippians 3:19
Hard-hearted -Ezekiel 3:7
Hating the light -Job 24:13; John 3:20
Heady and high-minded -2 Timothy 3:4
Hostile to God -Romans 8:7; Colossians 1:21
Hypocritical -Isaiah 29:13; 2 Timothy 3:5
Ignorant of God -Hosea 4:1; 2 Thessalonians 1:8
Impudent -Ezekiel 2:4
Incontinent -2 Timothy 3:3
Infidel -Psalms 10:4; 14:1
Loathsome -Proverbs 13:5
Lovers of pleasure more than of God -2 Timothy 3:4
Lying -Psalms 58:3; 62:4; Isaiah 59:4
Mischievous -Proverbs 24:8; Micah 7:3
Murderous -Psalms 10:8; 94:6; Romans 1:29
Prayerless -Job 21:15; Psalms 53:4
Persecuting -Psalms 69:26; 109:16
Perverse -Deuteronomy 32:5
Proud - Psalms 59:12; Obadiah 3:2; 2 Timothy 3:2
Rejoicing in the affliction of saints -Psalms 35:15
Reprobate -2 Corinthians 13:5; 2 Timothy 3:8; Titus 1:16
Selfish -2 Timothy 3:2
Sensual -Philippians 3:19; Jude 1:19
Sold under sin -1 Kings 21:20; 2 Kings 17:17
Stiff-hearted -Ezekiel 2:4
Stiff-necked -Exodus 33:5; Acts 7:51
Uncircumcised in heart -Jeremiah 9:26; Acts 7:51
Unjust -Proverbs 11:7; Isaiah 26:10
Unmerciful -Romans 1:31
Ungodly -Proverbs 16:27
Unholy -2 Timothy 3:2
Unprofitable -Matthew 25:30; Romans 3:12
Unruly Titus 1:10
Unthankful -Luke 6:35; 2 Timothy 3:2
Untoward Acts 2:40
Unwise -Deuteronomy 32:6 |
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Colossians
1:22 yet
He has
now
reconciled
(3SAAI)
you
in
His
fleshly
body
through
death
in
order to
present
(AAN)
you
before
Him
holy
and
blameless
and
beyond reproach (NASB:
Lockman)
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Greek:
nuni
de
apokatellaxen (3SAAI)
en
to
somati
tes
sarkos
autou
dia
tou
thanatou,
parastesai (AAN)
humas
Hagious
kai
amomous
kai
anegkletous
katenopion
autou,
Amplified: Yet now has [Christ, the Messiah] reconciled [you to
God] in the body of His flesh through death, in order to present you
holy and faultless and irreproachable in His [the Father’s]
presence. (Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
KJV:
(Versification different than most modern translations) 21 And you,
that were sometime alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked
works, yet now hath he reconciled 22 In the body of his flesh
through death, to present you holy and unblameable and unreproveable
in his sight
NLT: yet now he has brought you back as his friends. He has
done this through his death on the cross in his own human body. As a
result, he has brought you into the very presence of God, and you
are holy and blameless as you stand before him without a single
fault. (NLT
- Tyndale House)
Phillips: He
has now reconciled through the death of his body on the cross, so
that he might welcome you to his presence clean and pure, without
blame or reproach. (Phillips:
Touchstone)
Wuest: yet
now He reconciled in the body of His flesh through His death, in
order that He might present you holy and without blemish and
unchargeable before His searching and penetrating gaze (Eerdmans)
Weymouth: He has now, in His human body, reconciled to God by
His death, to bring you, holy and faultless and irreproachable, into
His presence;
Young's Literal: in the body of his flesh through the death,
to present you holy, and unblemished, and unblameable before
himself,
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YET HE HAS NOW RECONCILED IN
HIS FLESHLY BODY THROUGH (the) DEATH: nuni de apokatellaxen (3SAAI) en
to somati tes sarkos autou dia tou thanatou:
(Col
2:11-note,
Ro 5:10-note,Eph
2:15, 16-note,
1Pe 3:18-note)
In a Parallel
passage in Romans Paul writes...
For if while we were enemies we
were reconciled to God through the death of His Son, much more, having
been reconciled, we shall be saved by His life. 11
And not only this, but
we also exult in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we
have now received the reconciliation. (See discussion of
reconciliation in
Romans 5:10,
5:11)
Yet...now - introduces a
sharp contrast with the previous description.
He has reconciled - God has
carried out this transaction.
He has reconciled (604) (apokatallasso
from apó = from, state to be left behind +
katallasso
= reconcile <> katá = an
intensifier + allásso = change) pictures the complete change or
alteration of state. It means to exchange hostility for friendship. In context
this "exchange" occurred on the Cross where the
burden of my sin was rolled away (aorist
tense = past
completed action, historical event) for “God was in Christ reconciling
the world to Himself” (1Co 5:19). God did this, not us. It was a
miracle of grace. Hallelujah!
Apokatallasso - 3x in 3v -
Eph 2:16; Col 1:20, 22
It is imperative that all of us be
reconciled to Christ. Without reconciliation we will remain
spiritually lost and adrift, alienated from God. God's desire is that
we be reconciled (cp His heart in 2Pe 3:9-note,
1Ti 2:2, 3, Re 22:17-note).
God's Son endured the Cross “for the joy set before Him” (He 12:2-note).
There is only one thing to do, and that is to say "Yes, Lord, I
believe in Your Son's substitutionary, propitiatory death which makes
possible my regeneration and reconciliation." The
result of reconciliation is the restoration of peace (Ro 5:1-note)
which had been disturbed (Ep 2:16-note;
Col 1:20, cp Ge 3:11,24).
Through Christ's propitiatory
sacrifice (Ro 3:24, 25-notes), God is reconciled because His demand for
justice has been satisfied at Calvary. Sinful man is reconciled in
that his attitude of enmity toward God is changed to one of
friendship.
Reconciliation takes someone who is hostile towards
someone else, and changes that into a friendly relationship. Unsaved
man is hostile toward God and Jesus places us into a friendly
relationship.
Apokatallasso
is stronger term for reconcile, then
katallasso
(set up a relationship of peace not existing before), in
that apokatallasso is the restoration of a relationship of peace which
has been disturbed.
Something has happened within us. It occurred when we saw that the
death of Jesus was for us, that somehow he had done something to set
aside our estrangement, our brokenness and hurt, and that if we came
to him in faith he would deliver us. So we came. Something happened
then to our inner attitude. We were changed in the way we thought. We
no longer saw God as an enemy and a Judge, but as a loving Father. We
recognized that the cross was not a symbol of failure in the life of a
religious fanatic, but it was a moment when the great enemies all men
face were conquered; when death was overcome and all the evil powers
against mankind were set at naught. Thus our whole life was changed.
S Lewis Johnson adds this
comment regarding reconciliation...
In article two of the thirty-nine
articles of religion of the church of England, there in a very
excellent statement, concerning the Lord Jesus Christ, reference is
made to the fact that the eternal Son, the word of the Father, very
God and very man was crucified, and then these words follow, "To
reconcile His father to us." Now I think that that is a fair
statement, but I would like to make only one change which is not very
significant. I would like to say to reconcile His God to us for the
simple reason that reconciliation is judicial, not paternal in its
significance. So we will take the position that it is not simply man
that is reconciled, though that's the emphasis of the New Testament,
we may also say God is reconciled in this sense, that He is
propitiated by the saving work of the Lord Jesus Christ and thus
reconciles, on that basis, man. Whether we agree or disagree on this,
I think relatively minor point, we all can, I think, appreciate the
importance of the doctrine of reconciliation, and we can sing together
these marvelous little lines which we often sing in our meetings,
"Sing it o'er and o'er again, Christ receiveth sinful men, make the
message clear and plain, Christ receiveth sinful men." (Read
or listen to Dr Johnson's entire message)
D A Carson makes statement
which helps us understand how we as humans have difficulty resolving
God's attributes of perfect anger and perfect love...
Our problem in part is that in
human experience wrath and love normally abide in mutually exclusive
compartments. Love drives wrath out, or wrath drives love out. We come
closest to bringing them together, perhaps, in our responses to a
wayward act by one of our children, but normally we do not think that
a wrathful person is loving. But this is not the way it is with God.
God's wrath is not an implacable blind rage. However emotional it may
be, it is an entirely reasonable and willed response to offenses
against His holiness. At the same time His love wells up amidst His
perfections and is not generated by the loveliness of the loved. Thus
there is nothing intrinsically impossible about wrath and love being
directed toward the same individual or people at once. God in His
perfections must be wrathful against His rebel image-bearers, for they
have offended Him; God in His perfections must be loving toward His
rebel image-bearers, for He is that kind of God. (Bibliotheca Sacra
Volume 156:389. Dallas Theological Seminary)
><>><>><>
Illustration of "Reconcile
all things to Himself" - In the closing scene in the motion picture,
Ben Hur. The movie camera takes a long shot of three crosses rising
out of a distant hill. Then the camera moves in close, closer, to the
figure stretched out on the center cross. Lightning reveals a man
squirming in silent agony to the rhythm of the flashes. It is raining
hard. With each flash of light, the pool of rain water at the foot of
the cross grows larger. Suddenly a single drop of blood drips into the
pool and scatters. Then another drop falls. And then another. The pool
is now tinted light red. The rain comes harder and the pool overflows
into another pool immediately below it. The second pool reddens and
enlarges, overflowing into still another pool which, in turn,
overflows into a small stream. The blood-stained stream flows into a
larger stream which meets a river which flows into an ocean.
A T Robertson reminds us
that...
The reconciliation was accomplished
by means of Christ’s death on the cross and not just by the
Incarnation (the body of His flesh) in which the death took place.
Although not all
commentators agree, some feel Paul combines both
soma and sarx to make plain the actual humanity of Jesus
in order to counter the heresy of Docetism, which says yes
Christ was deity but that He was not really humanity but only appeared
to be humanity, thus denying the incarnation.
Docetism (see ref
#1
or
#2) (from Greek
dokeo = to seem or appear) taught that
Jesus was fully God but only "seemed" or "appeared" to have a human
body and by extension He only "seemed" to suffer and die on the Cross.
You can see the importance of this "small point" lest one preach
another "gospel" and another "Jesus", neither of which are the truth
and neither of which have the inherent saving power of the true gospel
of Jesus Christ.
Calvin
writes that...
the body of His flesh
means that human body, which the Son of God had in common with us. He
meant, therefore, to intimate, that the Son of God had put on the same
nature with us, that he took upon him this vile earthly body, subject
to many infirmities, that he might be our Mediator. When he adds,
by death, he again
calls us back to sacrifice. For it was necessary that the Son of God
should become man, and be a partaker of our flesh, that he might be
our brother: it was necessary that he should by dying become a
sacrifice, that he might make his Father propitious to us.
Through death
- The means by which God was able to bring about reconciliation was
through His death, through the blood of His cross. Later in this
letter (especially Col 3:5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15f) Paul
exhorts (and commands) us to a conduct ourselves in a completely new
lifestyle now that we are in Christ and no longer in Adam. As you
begin to live our this new life in Christ, don't forget the great
truth on the basis of which our new life has been possible -
through Christ's death. Let this great truth constrain,
impel and empower you to live out this new life as you are continually
being transformed by His grace.
Death (2288)
(thanatos from
thnesko = to die) refers physically to the separation of soul
from the body (physical) death and was a legal technical term for
capital punishment. In the NT thanatos is often treated as a
destroying power related to sin and its consequences.
Thanatos - 120 times in the NT - Mt. 4:16;
10:21; 15:4; 16:28; 20:18; 26:38, 66; Mk. 7:10; 9:1; 10:33; 13:12;
14:34, 64; Lk. 1:79; 2:26; 9:27; 22:33; 23:15, 22; 24:20; Jn. 5:24;
8:51f; 11:4, 13; 12:33; 18:32; 21:19; Acts 2:24; 13:28; 22:4; 23:29;
25:11, 25; 26:31; 28:18; Ro 1:32; 5:10, 12, 14, 17, 21; 6:3, 4, 5, 9,
16, 21, 23; 7:5, 10, 13, 24; 8:2, 6, 38; 1 Co. 3:22; 11:26; 15:21, 26,
54, 55, 56; 2 Co. 1:9f; 2:16; 3:7; 4:11f; 7:10; 11:23; Phil. 1:20;
2:8, 27, 30; 3:10; Col. 1:22; 2 Ti 1:10; Heb. 2:9, 14f; 5:7; 7:23;
9:15f; 11:5; Jas. 1:15; 5:20; 1 Jn. 3:14; 5:16f; Rev. 1:18; 2:10f, 23;
6:8; 9:6; 12:11; 13:3, 12; 18:8; 20:6, 13f; 21:4, 8
Hark!
The Herald Angels Sing
by Charles
Wesley
Click to play hymn
Hark! The
herald angels sing,
“Glory to the newborn King;
Peace on earth, and mercy mild,
God and sinners
reconciled!”
Veiled in flesh the Godhead see;
Hail th’ incarnate Deity,
Pleased with us in flesh to dwell,
Jesus our Emmanuel.
Hail the heav’nly Prince of Peace!
Hail the Sun of Righteousness!
Light and life to all He brings,
Ris’n with healing in His wings.
Now display Thy saving
power,
Ruined nature now restore;
Now in mystic union join
Thine to ours, and ours to Thine.
Adam’s likeness, Lord,
efface,
Stamp Thine image in its place:
Second Adam from above,
Reinstate us in Thy love.
Let us Thee, though lost, regain,
Thee, the Life, the inner man:
O, to all Thyself impart,
Formed in each believing heart.
IN ORDER TO PRESENT
YOU BEFORE HIM: parastesai (AAN) katenopion autou:
(Col 1:28, 2Co 4:14, 11:2)
In order to
- Not in the Greek but added by translators to emphasize that Paul is
drawing a conclusion as he describes the ultimate purpose of reconciliation.
Present
(3936)
(paristemi
from para = near + histemi = place) literally means to place beside with the idea
of yielding to the disposal of another. In the Greek translation of
the Hebrew (Septuagint) this verb is
often used as a technical term for a priest’s placing an offering on
the altar with the idea of surrendering or yielding up. (Meditate on
that thought.) The only acceptable worship under the New Covenant is
the offering of oneself to God. The sacrifices of God are a broken
spirit; a broken and a contrite heart, O God, Thou wilt not despise”
(Ps 51:17, cp note
1 Peter 2:5).
Paristemi
is in the
aorist tense
which signifies completed action at some time, past, present or
future. Wayne Barber's thought is that
the
aorist tense here signifies that in each and every situation of my
life I will be found alongside Him, set apart for His use, absolutely
blameless and beyond reproach. Jesus Christ is the supreme Lord of my
life. This is the reason for our having been reconciled.
Paristemi
- 41 uses in NT - Matt. 26:53; Mk. 4:29; 14:47, 69f; 15:35, 39; Lk.
1:19; 2:22; 19:24; Jn. 18:22; 19:26; Acts 1:3, 10; 4:10, 26; 9:39, 41;
23:2, 4, 24, 33; 24:13; 27:23f; Rom. 6:13, 16, 19; 12:1; 14:10; 16:2;
1 Co. 8:8; 2 Co. 4:14; 11:2; Eph. 5:27; Col. 1:22, 28; 2 Tim. 2:15;
4:17
Writing to the
saints at Corinth Paul declared...
that He who raised the Lord Jesus
will raise us also with Jesus and will present (paristemi)
us with you. (2Co 4:14)
There is a
future presentation when the Bride is presented by Himself to
Himself...
Christ also loved the church and
gave Himself up for her; 26 that He might sanctify her, having
cleansed her by the washing of water with the word, 27 that He might
present to Himself the church in all her glory, having no spot or
wrinkle or any such thing; but that she should be holy and
blameless. (See notes
Ep 5:25;
26;
27)
Note that the
church is described with the same phrase holy and
blameless. That is our position in Christ, but in the meantime we
need to ''make ourselves ready'' for the marriage of the Lamb.
Let us rejoice and be glad and give the glory to Him, for the marriage
of the Lamb has come and His bride has made herself ready. (see note
Revelation 19:7)
In a parallel
passage Paul writes to the saints at Corinth that...
I am jealous for you with a godly
jealousy; for I betrothed you to one husband, that to Christ I
might present (paristemi)
you as a pure virgin. (2 Cor 11:2)
Paul uses
paristemi again in Colossians 1 writing that one of the great
purposes of His ministry to the saints was to...
proclaim Him (Christ in us the hope
of glory), admonishing every man and teaching every man with all
wisdom, that we may present (paristemi)
every man complete in Christ. (see note
Colossians 1:28)
Before (2714)
(katenopion from kata =
down + en = in + ops = face, eye, the
combination giving the picture of the saints holy/blameless) means
right down in the eye of (God). The Latin term Coram Deo
("Before the face of God") is apropos. This describes the believer's
present position in Christ!
Katenopion
- 3 times in the NT - Eph. 1:4; Col. 1:22; Jude 1:24
In his letter to
the Ephesians Paul reiterates the truth that God...
chose us in Him (in
Christ) before
the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless
before (katenopion) Him... (see note
Ephesians 1:4)
God now views
believers as clothed with the righteousness of Christ. The process of
spiritual growth (our practice) involves becoming in practice what we
are in reality before God (our position). We “have put on the new
self” and that new self
is being renewed to a true knowledge according to the image of the One
who created him (see note
Colossians 3:10).
HOLY AND BLAMELESS AND
BEYOND REPROACH: meas hagious kai
amomous kai anegkletous: (1Cor 1:8 Eph 1:4, 5:27, Php
2:15,1Thes 3:13 Jude 1:24, Re 14:5 Ge 6:9, 17:1, Job 1:8, Ps 19:13 Ex
29:1) (Ro 8:1 ,33 Re 12:10)
Holy
(40)
(hagios) (Click word study of
hagios) means separated from sin
and set apart unto God. The idea of taking something
filthy and washing it and setting it apart as something brand new and
useful for different purpose. Holy has to do with the
believer’s present relationship with God, because as a result of our
faith, we are placed in union with Jesus Christ (see notes on
in Christ
or
here) and God
now sees every believer as holy as His Son.
He made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, that we might
become the righteousness of God in Him” (2 Cor 5:21).
Application: Since
we are securely positionally holy in Christ, we should
now live out this truth in our daily practice in order to enjoy the beauty
and benefits of a holy life which is wholly His.
As Wayne Barber
has often said a boat (Christian) in the water (in this world,) is by
design, but water (the world) in the boat (Christian) is disaster.
When you are living in this world, you are not a part of it, but you
are set apart for the Master's use (2Ti 2:21-note). So our RECONCILIATION is not just to get us
into heaven, but to BE SET APART FOR HIS USE ("to get heaven into us").
Blameless
(299)
(amomos from a = without + momos = spot,
blemish in physical sense or moral sense, blot, flaw, shame or
disgrace {as a moral disgrace}) is literally without spot or blemish. It
was used
literally of the absence of defects in sacrificial animals and
figuratively of the Lamb of God as unblemished. Faultless (holy and
pure). Morally blameless. Amomos as used
in this verse refers to blameless in a moral sense (irreproachable)
Amomos is a cultic term in the
Septuagint,
denoting the physical perfection of the priest or offering (see Nu
6:14 below), but may also be used for the absolute blamelessness of
God (see 1Sa 22:31)
Amomos is used times in the NT in the NASB (Ep
2x;
Phil;
Col;
Heb;
1P;
Jude;
Rev)
and is translated: above reproach, 1; blameless, 5; unblemished, 1;
without blemish, 1.
Ephesians 1:4 (note)
just as He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we
should be holy and blameless before Him. In love
Ephesians 5:27 (note)
that He might present to
Himself the church in all her glory, having no spot or wrinkle or any
such thing; but that she should be holy and blameless.
Philippians 2:15 (note)
that you may prove yourselves to be blameless and innocent, children
of God above reproach in the midst of a crooked and perverse
generation, among whom you appear as lights in the world,
Colossians 1:22
yet He has now
reconciled you in His fleshly body through death, in order to present
you before Him holy and blameless and beyond reproach--
Hebrews 9:14 (note)
how much more will the
blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered Himself
without blemish to God, cleanse your conscience from dead works to
serve the living God?
1 Peter 1:19 (note)
but with precious
blood, as of a lamb unblemished and spotless, the blood of Christ.
Jude 1:24 Now to Him who is
able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in the presence
of His glory blameless with great joy,
Revelation 14:5 (note)
And no lie was found in their mouth; they are blameless.
Amomos is used 76 times in the
Septuagint (LXX)
(Exod. 29:1, 38; Lev.
1:3, 10; 3:1, 6, 9; 4:3, 14, 23, 28, 32; 5:15, 18; 6:6; 9:2f; 12:6;
14:10; 22:19, 21; 23:12, 18; Num. 6:14; 7:88; 15:24; 19:2; 28:3, 9,
11, 19, 27, 31; 29:2, 8, 13, 17, 20, 23, 26, 29, 32, 36; 2 Sam. 22:24,
31, 33; Ps. 15:2; 18:23, 30, 32; 19:7, 13; 37:18; 64:4; 101:1, 6;
119:1, 80; Prov. 11:5, 20; 20:7; 22:11; Ezek. 28:15; 43:22f, 25;
45:18, 23; 46:4, 6, 13; Dan. 1:4)
The picture of
amomos reminds one of the Old Testament sacrificial animal
which was required to be free of defects. Under Jewish law before an
animal could be offered as a sacrifice it must be inspected and if any
blemish was found it must be rejected as unfit for an offering to God.
Only the best was fit to offer to God.
In the
Septuagint (LXX)
amomos is used three times in one verse noting that the
Nazarite
shall present his offering to the LORD: one male lamb a year old
without defect (amomos) for a burnt offering and one ewe-lamb a
year old without defect (amomos) for a sin offering and one ram
without defect (amomos) for a peace offering" (Nu 6:14)
Barclay adds that
amomos...
thinks of the whole man as an
offering to God. It thinks of taking every part of our life, work,
pleasure, sport, home life, personal relationships, and making them
all such that they can be offered to God. This word does not mean that
the Christian must be respectable; it means that he must be perfect.
To say that the Christian must be amomos is to banish
contentment with second bests; it means that the Christian standard is
nothing less than perfection. (Barclay,
W: The Daily Study Bible Series. The Westminster Press
or
Logos)
Amomos is used by
Peter to describe Christ's "precious blood, as of a lamb
unblemished (amomos) and spotless, the blood of
Christ." (see note
1 Peter 1:19)
God "chose (actually picked us out for Himself as His own)
us in Him (our position) before the foundation of the
world, that we should be
holy and blameless (amomos)
before Him" (see note
Ephesians 1:4).
One day in eternity future Jesus
will
present to Himself the church in all her glory, having no
spot or wrinkle or any such thing; but that she should be
holy and blameless (amomos)."
(see note
Ephesians 5:27)
As A T
Pierson (in "The Work of Christ") says
Think of it—when the omniscient eye looks upon us at the last, He will
not find anything that to His immaculate holiness can be so much as a
pimple or a mole on a human face. How incredible!
F W Grant
(in his commentary on Ephesians) concurs adding that there will be
No sign of old age about it, no defect; nothing will suit Him then but
the bloom and eternity of an eternal youth, the freshness of
affections which will never tire, which can know no decay. The Church
will be holy and blameless then. After all that we have known of her
history, it would be strange to read that, if we did not know how
gloriously God maintains His triumph over sin and evil.
As we work out our salvation in
fear and trembling, not grumbling or disputing, we
prove
yourselves to be blameless and innocent, children of God above
reproach (amomos) in the midst of a crooked and
perverse generation, among whom you appear as lights in the world."
(see note
Philippians 2:15)
The children of God are to be free from defilement and so
not chargeable with justifiable criticism even though we live in the
midst of a twisted and perverted generation. By living lives above
reproach and without blemish, God’s children will stand out
all the more clearly against the dark background of this world. The
darker the night, the brighter the light appears. We as
believers cannot create light per se, but we can reflect the glory of
Christ in us so that others may see Jesus in us. Like every other
spiritual virtue, being blameless, faultless and above reproach is
impossible in a believer’s own power. Such a practice is only possible
in the power of the the unblemished and spotless Christ Himself Who
is
able to keep (believers) from stumbling, and to make (them)
stand in the presence of His glory blameless (amomos) with
great joy” (Jude 1:24).
Remember too
that God cannot shine through you until He works in you, so let Him
have His way.
Beyond reproach
(410)
(anegkletos) (Click study of
anegkletos) means unaccused
and goes beyond "blameless" to convey even more the idea of being
"unaccusable"! It means not only that we are without blemish, but
also that no one can bring a charge against us...
Who will bring a charge against
God's elect? God is the one who justifies (see note
Romans 8:33).
Anegkletos - 5 times in
the NT - 1Co 1:8; Col. 1:22; 1Ti 3:10; Titus 1:6, 7
Vincent affirms that anegkletos is
not only actually free from blemish, but from
the charge of it. (Vincent, M. R. Word Studies in the New
Testament)
Elsewhere Vincent notes that the root
word egkaleo means to accuse publicly and in context
before the throne of God, something that can no longer transpire for saints
because we are
in Christ
(or
see note here). This is an amazing truth that when a
sinner submits themselves to God, His
grace makes our lives nothing less
than a sacrifice fit to offer to Him!
John writes about the fate of the
Accuser of the brethren...
And I heard a loud voice in
heaven, saying, "Now the salvation, and the power, and the kingdom
of our God and the authority of His Christ have come, for the
accuser of our brethren has been thrown down, who accuses (present
tense =
continuously) them before our God day and night. (see note
Revelation 12:10)
Satan however cannot make a
charge stick against those whom Christ has reconciled. Believer's are washed in the blood of the
Lamb and made forever clean and able to stand before the Judge (He
12:23-note, Ja 5:9), with no accusations against him (Ro
8:1-note,1Cor
1:8, Jude 23). This should make us shout "Hallelujah!" |
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Colossians
1:23 if
indeed you
continue
in
the
faith
firmly established
(RPPMPN)
and
steadfast and not
moved away
(PPPMPN)
from
the
hope of the
gospel
(see "Blessed
Hope")
that
you have
heard
(2PAAI),
which was
proclaimed
(AAPNSG)
in
all
creation
under
heaven
and of which I,
Paul was
made (1SAMI)
a
minister.
(NASB:
Lockman)
|
|
Greek:
ei
ge
epimenete (2PPAI)
te
pistei
tethemeliomenoi
(RPPMPN)
kai
hedraioi
kai
me
metakinoumenoi
(PPPMPN)
apo
tes
elpidos
tou
euaggeliou
ou
ekousate, (2PAAI)
tou
keruchthentos
(AAPNSG)
en
pase
ktisei
te
hupo
ton
ouranon,
ou
egenomen (1SAMI)
ego
Paulos
diakonos.
Amplified: [And
this He will do] provided that you continue to stay with and in the
faith [in Christ], well-grounded and settled and steadfast, not
shifting or moving away from the hope [which rests on and is inspired
by] the glad tidings (the Gospel), which you heard and which has been
preached [as being designed for and offered without restrictions] to
every person under heaven, and of which [Gospel] I, Paul, became a
minister. (Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
KJV: If ye
continue in the faith grounded and settled, and be not moved away
from the hope of the gospel, which ye have heard, and which was
preached to every creature which is under heaven; whereof I Paul am
made a minister;
NLT: But you must continue to believe this truth and stand in
it firmly. Don't drift away from the assurance you received when you
heard the Good News. The Good News has been preached all over the
world, and I, Paul, have been appointed by God to proclaim it. (NLT
- Tyndale House)
Phillips: This
reconciliation assumes, of course, that you maintain a firm position
in the faith, and do not allow yourselves to be shifted away from the
hope of the Gospel, which you have heard, and which, indeed, the whole
world is now having an opportunity of hearing. (Phillips:
Touchstone)
Wuest: Assuming indeed, that you are adhering to your faith,
having been placed upon a foundation with the present result that you
are on that foundation, firmly established, and that you are not
continually being shifted away from your hope held out by the gospel
which you heard, that gospel which was proclaimed in all creation,
which is under heaven, of which I, Paul, became one who ministers. (Eerdmans)
Weymouth: if, indeed, you are still firmly holding to faith
as your foundation, without ever shifting from your hope that rests
on the Good News that you have heard, which has been proclaimed in
the whole creation under Heaven, and in which I Paul have been
appointed to serve.
Young's Literal: if also ye remain in the faith, being
founded and settled, and not moved away from the hope of the good
news, which ye heard, which was preached in all the creation that is
under the heaven, of which I became -- I Paul -- a ministrant.
|
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IF INDEED
YOU CONTINUE IN THE FAITH: eige
epimenete (2PPAI)
te pistei: (1Sa
15:11, 1Ki 11:4, Ho 6:3, Zeph 1:6 Mt 7:22, 23,Jn 6:66, 1Jn 2:19, Mt
10:22, 24:13. Lk 8:15, 22:32. Jn 8:30, 31, 32; 15:4, 6, 9, 10, Acts
11:23; 14:22; Ro 2:6, 7, 1Co 9:27, 10:12. Gal 4:11; 5:7; 1Th 3:5; Heb
3:6, 14, 4:1, 11, 14, 10:35, 38; 2Pe 1:10; 2:18, 19, 20, 21, 22 1Jn
2:27 Re 2:10, 26)
This phrase represents what in
Greek is known as a first class
conditional statement which is determined as fulfilled (thus one
could substitute the word "since"). There is
an added touch of
eagerness in the use of ge (at least).
Wuest has an excellent note on this section adding that
The word “if”
here is not ean, an unfulfilled, hypothetical condition
used with the subjunctive mode, presenting the possibility of a
future realization, but ei with the indicative,
having here the idea of “assuming that you continue in the
faith.” That is, continuance in the gospel as it was preached by
Paul would show that the person was saved and thus would be
presented holy, without blemish, and unchargeable before God.
That is, Paul was here addressing truly born-again Colossians, not
unsaved professors of Christianity who would follow the Colossian
heresy. Heretics would not so be presented, only true believers. It is
not the retention of salvation that is in the apostle’s mind, but the
possession of it that would be shown by their continuance in the
gospel. Expositors says; “This is directed against the false teacher’s
assurance that the gospel they had heard needed to be supplemented if
they wished to attain salvation.
(Wuest,
K. S. Wuest's Word Studies from the Greek New Testament: Eerdmans
or
Logos)
Peter O’Brien paraphrases the idea
At any rate if you stand firm in the faith—and I am sure you will.
One's perseverance does not earn
their salvation but it does show that person is saved because only a
born again person could persevere to the end.
O Lord, how this message needs to be sounded forth boldly from the
pulpits across America as so many I fear are deceived by their
profession as indicated by their absence of a changed life (see
note
Titus 1:16).
On the other hand Paul directs his argument against the false teaching
that the gospel they had believed was not sufficient and that they
needed something in addition if they wanted to attain true salvation.
They were adding to salvation by faith alone. They twisted the truth
that faith alone saves (Col 2:6-note) but the faith that saves is
not alone (but in fact is accompanied by fruit/deeds/works Ephesians
2:10
(note), Titus 2:14
(note);
Ja 2:16-26 (see
notes) When we were born from above, God placed us on the
Cornerstone (Isa 28:16, 1Pe 2:6, 7-notes), Christ Jesus, and we are
established for all eternity because of that union. All true believers
have been placed (passive) upon (in the cleft of) the Rock of our
salvation, the church's one Foundation, Jesus Christ our Lord.
Continue (1961)
(epimeno
from epí = upon, in or at +
méno = stay, remain, to persist in, adhere to, stay at or
with, abide by) means to abide in, continue in, tarry (abide or stay
in or at a place), linger in expectation, continue, persevere, persist
(in), to stay at or with, to remain.
The
present tense
calls for a continual action - this should be our
habitual practice or our lifestyle. See below for what "the faith"
refers to.
Epi in epimeno adds to the force of the linear action
of the present tense (continue and then some). So they are continually
abiding, remaining, persevering, tarrying in the faith. The
instruction in this verse is similar to that in Hebrews
Hebrews 3:6 (note)
Christ
was faithful as a Son over His house whose house we are, if we
hold fast our confidence and the boast of our hope firm until
the end."
Hebrews 3:14 (note)
For we have become
partakers of Christ, if we hold fast the beginning of our assurance
firm until the end
The teaching is not that perseverance in the faith
saves an individual but that one's perseverance to the end is evidence that that person is
truly saved. While it is important for Christians to continually
continue in godly conduct, we do so with the realization that we are
not saved by our godly conduct.
Although you will read some
commentaries which will state that although perseverance is preferred
for genuine believers, it is not inevitable (e.g.
Constable [Pdf]). This website does
not espouse this interpretative view and agrees with men like John
MacArthur (and others quoted below)
Of all the marks of a genuine Christian presented in Scripture, none
is more significant than the one Paul mentions here. People give
evidence of being truly reconciled when they continue in the faith
firmly established and steadfast. The Bible repeatedly testifies that
those who are truly reconciled will continue in the faith...
Perseverance is the hallmark of the true saint...Lest there be any
confusion about what they were to continue in, Paul specifies the
content of their faith as the gospel that you have heard." (MacArthur,
J. Colossians. Chicago: Moody Press
or
Logos)
Dr John Piper has a number
of messages that deal with the perseverance of the saints (Click
here)
F F Bruce writes that...
If the gospel teaches the final
perseverance of the saints, it teaches at the same time that the
saints are those who finally persevere - in Christ. Continuance is the
test of reality. (Bolding added)
Note that this website (and these
commentaries quoted) is not saying that a believer will never
"backslide" (frankly, most of us have to one degree or another) but
according to this verse in Colossians (cf., Hebrews, et al), the
individual who backslides will not persevere or "continually continue"
in their backslidden condition until the end. (see quotes on
Backsliding or Drifting)
Hendriksen adds that
Divine
preservation always presupposes human perseverance. Perseverance
proves faith’s genuine character, and is
therefore indispensable to salvation. To be sure, no one can
continue in the faith in his own strength (Jn 15:5). The enabling
grace of God is needed from start to finish (Php 2:12-note,
Php 2:13-note). This,
however, does not cancel human responsibility and activity. Yes,
activity, continuous, sustained, strenuous effort (He 12:14-note). It
should be noted, however, that this is distinctly the activity of
faith (cf. 1Ti 2:15), a faith not in themselves but in God." (Bolding
added) (Hendriksen,
W., & Kistemaker, S. J. NT Commentary Set. Baker Book
or
Logos)
J Vernon McGee adds that
Paul’s point is that we have been
reconciled—it is an accomplished fact. So if you are a child of God
today, you will continue in the faith grounded and settled. You will
not be moved away from the hope of the gospel which you have heard. (McGee,
J V: Thru the Bible Commentary: Thomas Nelson
or
Logos)
MacDonald gives a well reasoned
comment writing that
the Scriptures...teach, as in this verse,
that true faith always has the quality of permanence, and that one
who has really been born of God will go on faithfully to the end.
Continuance is a proof of reality. Of course there is always the
danger of backsliding, but a Christian falls only to rise again (Pr
24:16). He does not forsake the faith." (Bolding added) (MacDonald,
W & Farstad, A. Believer's Bible Commentary: Thomas Nelson or
Logos)
Warren Wiersbe concurs explaining
that in this verse
Paul was saying, “If you are truly saved, and
built on the solid foundation, Jesus Christ, then you will continue in
the faith and nothing will move you. You have heard the Gospel and
trusted Jesus Christ, and He has saved you.” In other words, we are
not saved by continuing in the faith. But we continue in the faith
and thus prove that we are saved. It behooves each professing
Christian to test his own faith and examine his own heart to be sure
he is a child of God (2Cor 13:5;
2 Peter 1:10ff [note]). (Bolding added) (Wiersbe,
W: Bible Exposition Commentary. 1989. Victor
or
Logos)
Melick writes that
Paul taught
that those who know the truth will continue in the truth.
They will not fall away. Indeed, the personal commitments made at
conversion naturally produce a positive, lifelong commitment to Jesus."
(Bolding added) (Melick, R. R. Vol. 32: Philippians, Colossians,
Philemon: The New American Commentary. Page 234. Nashville: Broadman &
Holman Publishers)
Believer's Study Bible echoes the
thought that
Every true believer in Christ will
endure to the end.
(Criswell,
W A. Believer's Study Bible: New King James Version. 1991. Thomas
Nelson)
The Nelson Study Bible notes that
The perseverance of the Colossians
was proof of the reconciling work of Christ on their behalf. (Radmacher,
E. D., Allen, R. B., & House, H. W. The Nelson Study Bible: NKJV.
Nashville: Thomas Nelson)
The New Geneva Study Bible adds
that
Saving faith is persevering and
enduring faith
King James Version Study Bible
writes that
Perseverance in the Christian’s faith is a test of the
reality of one’s trust in Christ. This verse implies that true
believers will persevere." (King James Version study Bible.
Nashville: Thomas Nelson)
Barton writes that
Continue
securely” means to remain stable, to persevere. The Colossians should
not wander off into false teaching that contradicted the gospel they
had heard and the hope they had believed for salvation. Paul urged all
believers, like those in Colossae, to build carefully, persevering in
their faith. (For more encouragement in perseverance, see
Jn 8:31; 15:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8; Acts 14:21, 22; Jas 1:1, 2, 3, 4-note)
Genuine faith perseveres to the end, focusing on the hope promised,
which is the very content of the gospel. Hope is both the inward
attitude of expectancy and the objective reality of the gospel. Christ
is Lord, and he has promised that one day we will be with him."
(Bolding added) (Barton,
B, et al: The NIV Life Application Commentary Series: Tyndale
or
Logos)
The positive application of Paul’s words are this: the gospel does not
work like magic. The mind, the heart, and the will must be involved.
Our minds must feed on Christ and his Word. Our hearts are to focus on
him in love. Our wills are to take their practice and pattern from
him. Present faith leads to present results. Present drinking is for
present thirst. We must fill our lives every day from Him.
Ray Stedman writes
It is continuing
that is the proof of reality. Many people start out the Christian
life, filled with joy because they have found a new sensation. But it
does not last. Somewhere along the line it fades. Finally, they set it
all aside and go back to the way they once were. That is a sign there
was never real faith at the beginning. It is continuance that proves
reality. Someone has well said,
"If your faith fizzles before you finish, it is because it was faulty
from the first!"
You get an "F" for that performance! That does not mean that faith
cannot waver and wobble at times. It does with all of us. Sometimes
faith grows dim, but true faith never ceases. We never give up the
realization that God has changed us. There is a new attitude, a new
life imparted, and that is the sign that we cannot give up being a
Christian.
I received a phone call from a young man one day who said,
"I'm going to quit being a Christian. It's too hard. I don't want to
pay the price."
I said to him,
"I think that is what you ought to do."
There was a long silence for a moment, then he said,
"You know I can't do that."
I knew he could not, and he did not, for it is continuing that is the
proof of reality." (Read Dr Stedman's full sermon
The Great Mystery)
What are we to continue in? The
faith. But what is "the faith"? Is this our personal saving faith? Or
does this phrase refer to something else? Study the text box below:
|
THE FAITH** |
|
Before you read this note,
click to study the 38
uses of the phrase "the faith" in the NT. Examine the
context (what goes before and comes after the phrase "the
faith") to distinguish between those uses that clearly refer to
a personal faith which saves, eg, "the (personal)
faith of Abraham" in Ro 4:18-note). In the present verse the Greek
phrase is "tęi pistei" or "the faith", where the Greek definite
article ("tęi") "the" identifies this a specific faith. After
you've studied the verses on "the
faith", read on...
"The faith"
in the present verse is not a reference to the act of believing but rather to
what is believed. From the
38 NT uses of "the faith" you
can see that this phrase often refers to the the unchangeable message of the gospel, that
body of Christian truth which brings salvation to the soul that receives it.
Beloved, while I was making every effort to write you
about our common salvation, I felt the necessity to write
to you appealing that you contend earnestly for the
faith which was once for all delivered to the saints. (Jude
1:3)
In Jude this FAITH has
been delivered to the saints once for all and these who have
crept in have distorted "The
faith". The descriptive
modifying phrase, "which was once for all delivered to the
saints," makes it obvious that the reference is not to the
believers' subjective faith but to the objective truths to which
believers firmly adhere. He who once
persecuted us is now preaching the faith which he
once tried to destroy. (Gal 1:23)
Again from the context one
can easily discern that "preaching the faith"
clearly refers to the body of truth to be believed which
corresponds to "the gospel".
The faith refers to that body of doctrine that was given
by God through the Apostles to the church.
Historically Christendom has resorted to
many means in its conflicts with the enemies of the faith; it
has used violence, anathemas added to creeds, denunciations,
ostracism, and excommunication, as well as reasoning with those
espousing heretical views. An effective defense of the gospel
demands that God's truths must be embodied in the life of the
defender of "the faith", the gospel. The most
convincing argument for "the faith" is not the argument of
one's words, but the argument of one's life.
To contend effectively for the faith is costly and agonizing
work. It is the duty of every believer to contribute toward the
defense and preservation of the faith. To do so
they must show themselves saintly or as Paul exhorts the
Colossians to "continue in the faith." |
|
**Click discussion of the
meaning of the phrase "the
faith"
|
For completeness, it should be
noted that the NIV translates this phrase as “your”
faith, which is an interpretative translation (which Kenneth Wuest
agrees with), indicating that the translators felt Paul was referring
to their personal faith. While one cannot be absolutely dogmatic, it
is notable that most other modern translations (NAS, NAB, RSV, KJV,
NKJV, etc) translate this phrase literally as "the faith."
which makes it more likely to be a reference to the gospel or the body
of doctrine believed.
FIRMLY ESTABLISHED:
tethemeliomenoi (RPPMPN): (Col 2:7, Mt 7:25, Eph 3:17, 1Pe
5:10)
Spurgeon
concludes that...
This is a text that ought to be
read and pondered every day by the many unstable professors who are in
the church at this present time: “if ye continue in the faith
grounded and settled,” like a building that will have no further
settlements, no more starting of the stones, no more cracking of the
walls, because your foundation is secure, and you are firmly built
upon it.
Firmly established
(2311)
(themelioo
from the adjective
themélios = describe that which lies beneath - the foundation
referring to something secure and permanent)
(Click word study of
themelioo) means to lay a
foundation or provide with a foundation, to place on a firm, secure
foundation.
Themelioo - 5 times in the
NT - Matt. 7:25; Eph. 3:17; Col. 1:23; Heb. 1:10; 1 Pet. 5:10
In masonry the "foundation" refers to the
underlying base or support or the whole substructure of a building,
providing a stable base for any superstructure.
The radical notion of
themelioo is to ground securely.
Figuratively,
themelioo refers to
providing a firm basis for belief or practice establish, strengthen,
settle (place so as to stay, establish or secure permanently), cause
to be firm and unwavering.
Paul uses
themelioo to pray for the
saints at Ephesus that "Christ may dwell in your hearts through
faith; and that you, being rooted and grounded in love."
(Eph 3:17-note).
The
perfect tense
speaks of an action completed in past time having present results
and here conveys the idea of the permanence of this "establishment".
Wuest phrases it this way
having been placed upon a
foundation with the present result that you are on that foundation
Those Colossians who were saved, had been placed on
the foundation, the Lord Jesus, (cf "And the rain descended, and
the floods came, and the winds blew, and burst against that house;
and yet it did not fall, for it had been founded upon THE ROCK"
- Mt 7:25-note) with the result that they were
grounded on Him. The picture conveyed by
themelioo is that of a house
which is so firmly fixed on a foundation that it is not moved by
winds or floods or figuratively by the stormy waves of suffering or
the loud howling roar of our adversary, the devil. This initial grounding is a once-for-all act on the part of God
(occurring when we place our faith in Christ) which secures
permanent results.
C H Spurgeon in his sermon
Stand Fast (Colossians 1:23)
writes that...
the battle does not end when by a
desperate rush a man has come to Christ. In many it assumes a new
form; the enemy now attempts to drag the trembler from his refuge, and
eject him from his stronghold. It is difficult to get at the hope of
the gospel; but quite as difficult to keep it so as not to be moved
away from it. If Satan spends great power in keeping us from the hope,
he uses equal force in endeavoring to drag us away from it, and equal
cunning in endeavoring to allure us from it. Hence the apostle tells
us not to be moved away from the hope of the gospel: the exhortation
is needful in presence of an imminent danger.
Do not think that in the moment
when you believe in Christ the conflict is over, or you will be
bitterly disappointed. It is then that the battle renews itself, and
every inch of the road swarms with foemen. Between here and heaven you
will always have to fight more or less, and frequently the severest
struggle will be at a time when you are least prepared for it. There
may be smooth passages in your career, and you may for a while be like
your Savior in the wilderness, of Whom it is said, “Then the devil
departed from Him, and angels came and ministered unto Him”; but you
may not therefore cry, “My mountain standeth firm, I shall never be
moved”; for fair weather may not outlast a single day. Do not grow
secure, or carnally presumptuous. There is but a short space between
one battle and another in this world. It is a series of skirmishes
even when it does not assume the form of a pitched battle. He that
would win heaven must fight for it. He that would take the new
Jerusalem must scale it, and if he has the wit to take Jacob’s ladder
and set it against the wall and climb up that way, he will win the
city. “The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and the violent take
it by force” At this time our subject is not the winning, but the
wearing; not the taking but the holding of the fort: “Be not moved
away,” you that have come to it, “Be not moved away from the
hope of the gospel.” (Ed note: If you are in need of
encouragement to continue in the faith read Spurgeon's practical
message -
Stand Fast)
AND STEADFAST AND NOT MOVED
AWAY: kai hedraioi kai me metakinoumenoi (PPPMPN) : (1Cor
15:58 1Th 3:3 Jn 10:27, 28, Gal 2:13, Eph 4:14, 2Pe 3:17)
Steadfast
(1476)
(hedraios is from hedra = seat, chair) and
means settled, steady, steadfast painting the picture of one firmly
seated in a chair, settled in mind and purpose.
Describes the saints as firmly or solidly in place.
Hedraios - 3 times in the
NT - 1 Co. 7:37; 15:58; Col. 1:23
Moved away
(3334)
(metakineo from
meta = denoting change
of place or condition + kineo = to move, put in motion; English
- kinesiology -science of human movement)
means to be shifted from. The negative (me = not)
preceding the present tense (continuous action)
passive voice (subject affected by outside source or
force) is literally "not continuously being moved or shifted from
their" hope.
The
Septuagint (LXX)
uses
metakineo
to describe Jehovah's promise to
redeemed Israel in the
Millennium,
declaring that although
the mountains may be removed and
the hills may shake (metakineo)...My
lovingkindness will not be removed from you and My covenant of peace
will not be shaken,” says Jehovah Who has compassion on you."
(Isa 54:10)
Even as our "blessed hope
(absolute assurance of future good)" is sure in Christ, In the
Millennium topography ("mountains...hills" - see
Millennium 3)
will change but not God’s pledge of well-being for Israel as a
result of the New Covenant.
Grounded in Christ the Colossians
would not be moved from one place to another, and specifically not
moved away from their
hope which in turn rests on the
Gospel.
My God, I Know, I Feel Thee
Mine
by Charles
Wesley
(play
hymn) My God! I
know, I feel Thee mine,
And will not quit my claim,
Till all I have is lost in Thine,
And all renewed I am.
I hold Thee with a
trembling hand,
But will not let Thee go,
Till steadfastly
by faith I stand,
And all Thy goodness know.
Jesus, Thine all
victorious love
Shed in my heart abroad;
Then shall my feet no longer rove,
Rooted and fixed in God
O that in me the sacred
fire
Might now begin to glow,
Burn up the dross of base desire,
And make the mountains flow!
FROM THE HOPE OF THE GOSPEL
THAT YOU HAVE HEARD: apo tes elpidos tou euaggeliou ou ekousate
(2PAAI)
Related Resource:
Chart on the
Blessed
Hope
Hope
(1680)
(elpis from elpo = anticipate
usually with pleasure) is the desire of some good with
the expectation of
obtaining it. It is the absolute certainty of future good.
Elpis - 53 times in the NT
- Acts 2:26; 16:19; 23:6; 24:15; 26:6f; 27:20; 28:20; Rom. 4:18;
5:2, 4f; 8:20, 24; 12:12; 15:4, 13; 1 Co. 9:10; 13:13; 2 Co. 1:7;
3:12; 10:15; Gal. 5:5; Eph. 1:18; 2:12; 4:4; Phil. 1:20; Col. 1:5,
23, 27; 1 Thess. 1:3; 2:19; 4:13; 5:8; 2 Thess. 2:16; 1 Tim. 1:1;
Tit. 1:2; 2:13; 3:7; Heb. 3:6; 6:11, 18; 7:19; 10:23; 1 Pet. 1:3,
21; 3:15; 1 Jn. 3:3
So what does the gospel give a
person who without Christ has no hope? Obviously a sure Hope, the
absolute assurance that God will do good in the future to and for
the person who has received the Gospel (cp Jn 1:12, 13). This hope
is now the anchor of one's soul in the midst of the difficulties of
this present world, which is passing away. Believers now have
something eternal to life for because they have hope! Praise the
Lord for the truth inherent in the Biblical meaning of hope, for our
hope is not like the world's which is only a futile, vain, "I hope
so"!
Gospel (2098
) (euaggelion
from eú = good + aggéllo =
proclaim, tell) (Click word study of
euaggelion)
is literally
good news or glad tidings.
Euaggelion - 76 times in the NT - Matt. 4:23; 9:35; 24:14;
26:13; Mk. 1:1, 14f; 8:35; 10:29; 13:10; 14:9; 16:15; Acts 15:7;
20:24; Rom. 1:1, 9, 16; 2:16; 10:16; 11:28; 15:16, 19; 16:25; 1 Co.
4:15; 9:12, 14, 18, 23; 15:1; 2 Co. 2:12; 4:3f; 8:18; 9:13; 10:14;
11:4, 7; Gal. 1:6f, 11; 2:2, 5, 7, 14; Eph. 1:13; 3:6; 6:15, 19;
Phil. 1:5, 7, 12, 16, 27; 2:22; 4:3, 15; Col. 1:5, 23; 1 Thess. 1:5;
2:2, 4, 8f; 3:2; 2 Thess. 1:8; 2:14; 1 Tim. 1:11; 2 Tim. 1:8, 10;
2:8; Philemon 1:13; 1 Pet. 4:17; Rev. 14:6
In secular Greek the word euaggelion
was commonly used as our words "good news" today. The idea then and
now is something like this - “Have you any good news
(euaggelion) for me today?” This was a common question in the ancient
world. Our English word Gospel is from
the Old English or Saxon word gōdspell (gōd = good +
spell = message) which is literally "good tale, message". When I
was a young man Godspell was actually the name of a popular
musical play. I wonder if they really understood the meaning of
this word which is the very bedrock of the Christian faith. In modern
secular use gospel has an interesting meaning of something
accepted as infallible truth or as a guiding principle (e.g., such and
such is "the gospel truth"). This is not a bad Biblical definition
either!
The writers of
the New Testament adapted the term as God's message of salvation for
lost sinners. Euaggelion is found in several combination
phrases, each describing the gospel like a multifaceted jewel in
various terms from a different viewpoint (from the NASB, 1977):
the gospel of the kingdom (Mt 4:23)
the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son
of God (Mk 1:1) because it centers in Christ
the gospel of God (Mk 1:14) because it originates with God and was not invented
by man
the gospel of the kingdom of God (Lk
16:16)
the gospel of the grace of God (Acts
20:24),
the gospel of His Son (Ro 1:9-note)
the gospel of Christ (Ro 15:19-note)
the gospel of the glory of Christ (2Co
4:4)
the gospel of your salvation (Ep
1:13-note)
the gospel of peace (Ep 6:15-
note)
the gospel of our Lord Jesus (2Th
1:8)
the glorious gospel of the blessed
God (1Ti 1:11)
In Ro 16:25, 26 (see
note) Paul called
it “my Gospel” indicating that the special emphasis he
gave the gospel in his ministry.
Earlier Paul had reminded
the Colossians...
of the hope laid up for you in
heaven, of which you previously heard in the word of truth, the
gospel (see note
Colossians 1:5).
(What is a synonym for the gospel in this passage? How encouraging
is this simple observation in a world that largely functions on lies
and deception!)
The
Hope
that the gospel provides believers is like a foundation or an
anchor on which we can firmly plant our "spiritual" feet.
The writer of Hebrews testified in view of the fact that...
it is impossible
for God to lie, we may have strong encouragement, we who have
fled for refuge in laying hold of the hope set before us.
This hope we have as an anchor of the soul, a hope both
sure and steadfast and one which enters within the veil,
where Jesus has entered as a forerunner for us, having become a
high priest forever according to the order of Melchizedek.
(see notes
He 6:18;
19;
20)
Spurgeon addresses the
question...
And what is the ground of that
hope?
The ground of that hope is,
first, the rich, free, sovereign grace of God, because he has said,
“I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy, and I will have
compassion on whom I will have compassion.” The Lord claims for
himself the prerogative of mercy, and as he can exercise it without
the violation of his justice through the atoning sacrifice of
Christ, we joy and rejoice in the fact that men are not saved
because of any natural goodness of disposition, or because of
anything that they have done, or ever shall do. The children being
not yet born, neither having done good nor evil, the divine decree
stood fast fixed in the sovereign will and immutable counsels of
Jehovah, and it is a good ground of hope for the very chief of
sinners. If he has saved the dying thief,-if he has saved the
adulterer,-if he has saved even the murderer, why should he not save
me? He can if he will, and he is exceeding gracious, and infinite in
compassion, willing not the deaths of any, but that all should come
to repentance. It is in the mercy of our God that all our hopes
begin, and the cause of that mercy is itself. The reason of divine
love is divine love. Because God is gracious therefore he bestows
his grace upon the undeserving and the lost. Be not moved away from
this.
The ground of our salvation is, next, the merit of Christ-what
Christ is-what Christ has done-what Christ has suffered. This is
the ground upon which God saves the sons of men, Even Cardinal
Bellarmin, the mighty opponent of Luther-perhaps the best opponent
that he had, whose eyes saw much of gospel light, once said this,
that albeit that good works are necessary unto salvation, yet,
inasmuch as no man can be sure that he has performed as many good
works as will save him, it is, upon the whole, safest to trust alone
in the merits and sufferings of Christ. Cardinal! the safest way
suits me. If that be the best and safest, what better do any of us
want? Where is the rest for our soul if the ground of our hope is to
be what we arc, or what we do, or what we feel? But when we fall
back upon the finished work of Jesus Christ, and believe in him whom
God has set forth to be a propitiation for sin, and not for ours
only, but for the sins of the whole world,-I say, when we fall back
on him, then we have something solid to rest upon. Our eyes cannot
bear to look into eternity so long as we cling in the least degree
to human merit; but when it is all put aside, and we look to him
bleeding yonder on the cross, then is there a “peace that passeth
all understanding,” filling our hearts by Christ Jesus. Brethren,
if a man were to live in good works without a single sin for ten
thousand years, he would be well recompensed for that by
half-an-hour of heaven. How, then, can we expect to merit eternal
bliss by any works of ours? Ah, no; the hope were vanity. Heaven is
too precious a thing to be purchased by anything that we can by any
possibility do; but it is not too great to be purchased by the blood
of Christ; and when we come to his atonement our anchor holds
abidingly. “Be not moved away from the hope of the gospel.”
Another ground of our hope is
this,-that God has solemnly pledged that “ whosoever believeth in
Christ shall not perish, but shall have everlasting life.” if,
then, we do really and in very deed believe in Jesus Christ and rest
on him, we cannot perish, for God cannot contradict himself. Thus it
is written: hear it and accept it. “He that believeth and is
baptized shall be saved.” Those of us, then, who do trust the
Savior, and him only, and have made confession of that trust in his
own appointed way, know of a surety that God’s eternal veracity is
staked upon our salvation. It is not possible that the Lord should
east away a believer. Is it not written, “The just shall live by
faith”? We live because we believe in the ever living One. “ HE
that believeth in him hath everlasting life,” Be not moved away
from this gospel hope, which God that cannot lie has set before us.
The covenant of the King of kings
Shall stand for ever sure
Beneath the shadow of his wings
His saints repose secure.”
Another ground of our hope is the immutability of God. God
changes not, and therefore the sons of Jacob are not consumed. The
immutability of Christ also confirms our hope; for he is “ the same
yesterday, and to-day, and for ever.” The unchanging power of his
blood is a tower of strength to our faith.
“Dear dying Lamb, thy precious blood
Shall never lose its power,
Till all the ransomed church of God
Be saved to sin no more.”
If God be immutable, then those that believe in him have an
immutable hope: be sure that you never east it away.
But, once again, our hope of
the gospel is grounded in the infallibility of Scripture. The
Papist has an infallible pope, but we have an infallible Bible. If
that which is spoken in this Book be not true, neither is our hope
sure. If these things be questionable, our confidence is
questionable; but if this word of God abides fast for ever and ever,
though heaven and earth should pass away, then he that believes and
builds on this infallible truth may rejoice and stand fast. I
beseech you, “be not moved away from the hope of the gospel.”
(Read Spurgeon's message
Stand Fast)
Have heard (191)
(akouo)
means to hear with attention, to
hear with the ear of the mind or to hear effectually so as to
perform or grant what is spoken. The Colossians had heard (aorist
tense = past
completed action, a historical fact) about this wonderful hope
initially from Epaphras. Paul had just described the
the
hope
laid up for you in heaven, of which you previously heard
in the word of truth, the
gospel, which has come to
you...since the day you heard of it and understood the grace
of God in truth just as you learned it from Epaphras, our
beloved fellow bond-servant, who is a faithful servant of Christ on
our behalf" (see notes
Colossians 1:5;
1:6;
1:7)
THE
SOLID ROCK
by Edward
Mote
Music by William Bradbury
Click to play
My
Hope is built on nothing less
Than Jesus’ blood and righteousness.
I dare not trust the sweetest frame,
But wholly trust in Jesus’ Name
When darkness seems to hide His face,
I rest on His unchanging
grace.
In every high and stormy gale,
My anchor holds within the veil
His oath, His
Covenant, His blood,
Support me in the whelming flood.
When all around my soul gives way,
He then is all my
Hope and Stay.
When He shall come with trumpet sound,
Oh may I then in Him be found.
Dressed in His righteousness alone,
Faultless to stand before the throne.
Refrain:
On Christ the solid Rock I stand,
All other ground is sinking sand;
All other ground is sinking sand
WHICH WAS PROCLAIMED IN ALL
CREATION UNDER HEAVEN: tou keructhentosen (AAPNSG) pase ktisei te hupo ton ouranon:
(Col
1:6, Mt 24:14, Mk 16:15, Ro 10:18 )
Proclaimed
(2784)
(kerusso)
(aorist
tense = past
completed action, a historical fact) (Click for study of closely related
word
kerugma = proclamation) means to herald (as a public crier),
especially divine truth and always with the suggestion of formality,
gravity and an authority which must be listened to and obeyed.
In Paul’s day, a ruler had a
special herald who made announcements to the people. He was
commissioned by the ruler to make his announcements in a loud, clear
voice so everyone could hear. He was not an ambassador with the
privilege of negotiating; he was a messenger with a proclamation to be
heard and heeded. Not to heed the ruler’s messenger was serious; to
abuse the messenger was even worse. To announce publicly but not to
argue, reason, dispute, or convince by intellectual proof, against all
of which a keen intellect may bring counter argument. We simply state
in public or testify to all men the truth which God bids us speak. No
argument can assail the Truth presented in the announcement of the
GOSPEL. Men either believe the Truth, as all sane men should, or
refuse to believe it, as only fools venture to do.
Kerusso - 61 times in the
NT - Mt. 3:1 (Mt 3:2); 4:17, 23; 9:35; 10:7, 27; 11:1; 24:14; 26:13;
Mk. 1:4, 7, 14, 38f, 45; 3:14; 5:20; 6:12; 7:36; 13:10; 14:9; 16:15,
20; Lk. 3:3; 4:18f, 44; 8:1, 39; 9:2; 12:3; 24:47; Acts 8:5; 9:20;
10:37, 42; 15:21; 19:13; 20:25; 28:31; Ro 2:21; 10:8, 14f; 1 Co.
1:23; 9:27; 15:11f; 2 Co. 1:19; 4:5; 11:4; Gal. 2:2; 5:11; Phil.
1:15; Col. 1:23; 1 Thess. 2:9; 1 Tim. 3:16; 2 Tim. 4:2; 1 Pet. 3:19;
Rev. 5:2. What does Matthew record as an intrinsic component of the
proclamation in the first 2 occurrences in Scripture?
Alexander Whyte of Edinburgh wrote to a discouraged pastor...
The
angels around the throne envy you your great work.… Go on and grow in
grace and power as a gospel preacher.”
W. E. Sangster said...
Called to preach! … commissioned
of God to teach the word! A herald of the great King! A witness of
the Eternal Gospel! Could any work be more high and holy! To this
supreme task God sent his only begotten Son. In all the frustration
and confusion of the times, is it possible to imagine a work
comparable in importance with that of proclaiming the will of God to
wayward men?
For those who have eyes to
see and ears to hear, there can he found in every part of God's
creation abundant testimony to His power and wisdom in creating and
upholding all things. There is evidence of His curse upon the creation
because of sin, evidence of His love in conserving and saving His
creatures, and evidence of His purpose and future consummation. Truly
the gospel is being preached in every creation under heaven.
Creation (2937)
(ktisis
from ktízo = create, form or
found) refers to
bringing something into existence which has not existed before and
is generally used in
the NT of God's creative action (creation)
Ktisis - 19 times in the NT
- Mk. 10:6; 13:19; 16:15; Rom. 1:20, 25; 8:19, 20, 21, 39; 2 Co. 5:17;
Gal. 6:15; Col. 1:15, 23; Heb. 4:13; 9:11; 1 Pet. 2:13; 2 Pet. 3:4;
Rev. 3:14
AND OF WHICH I PAUL WAS
MADE A MINISTER: ou egenomen (1SAMI) ego Paulos diakonos:
(Acts
1:17, 26:16, Ro 15:16, 1Co 4:1, 2, 3; 2Co 3:6; 4:1; 5:18, 19, 20; 2Co
6:1; 11:23; Eph 3:7,8; 1Ti 1:12; 2:7; 2Ti 1:11; 4:5,6)
Paul (3972)
is from Latin,
Paulos
meaning "little, small". Before his Damascus Road experience he was
known by his Hebrew name Saul (Greek
Saulos)
which means "desired" or "ask" (derived from Hebrew word for "ask")
Was made (1096)
(ginomai) means to begin to be, to come into existence or into
any other state.
Spurgeon
rightly declares...
This is a wonderful expression,
“made a minister.” The true minister is of God’s making; a man-made
minister must be a poor creature, but a God made minister will prove
his calling: “whereof I am made a minister,”
Minister (1249)
(diakonos from diako = run on errands) (Click word study of related word
diakonia) refers to the rendering or
assistance or help by performing certain duties, often of a humble or
menial nature serve, including such mundane activities as waiting on
tables or caring for household needs—activities without apparent
dignity. Diakonos is similar to our verb minister
which means to give aid or service (to those who need it).
Diakonos - 29 times in the
NT - Matt. 20:26; 22:13; 23:11; Mk. 9:35; 10:43; Jn. 2:5, 9; 12:26;
Rom. 13:4; 15:8; 16:1; 1 Co. 3:5; 2 Co. 3:6; 6:4; 11:15, 23; Gal.
2:17; Eph. 3:7; 6:21; Phil. 1:1; Col. 1:7, 23, 25; 4:7; 1 Tim. 3:8,
12; 4:6
Writing to the Corinthians Paul
asks
What then is Apollos? And what is Paul? Servants (diakonos) through whom you believed, even as the Lord gave
opportunity to each one." (1Cor 3:5)
Jesus used verbal form describing Himself
in (Mk 10:45) declaring that "even the Son of Man did not come to be
served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many.").
Jesus promised that "If anyone serves (verb diakoneo) Me,
let him follow Me; and where I am, there shall My servant
(diakonos) also be; if anyone serves Me, the Father will honor him."
(Jn 12:26)
Christ is our Example. As Paul
exhorted the saints at Corinth "Be imitators of me, just as I also
am of Christ." (1Co 11:1) Paul is ever mindful of where his
adequacy comes from writing
Not that we are adequate in ourselves
to consider anything as coming from ourselves, but our adequacy is
from God, Who also made us adequate as servants (diakonos)
of a new covenant, not of the letter, but of the Spirit; for the
letter kills, but the Spirit gives life." (2Cor 3:5, 6)
3 WAYS TO ASSESS
IF ONE HAS TRULY BEEN RECONCILED
1) CONTINUANCE IN THE FAITH:
CONTINUE =
present tense = as a
lifestyle. Some people say I was saved 30 years ago, not realizing
that every time in Scripture you want to be assured as to whether or
not you are truly saved, it is not what happened in the past, but it
is what's going on in the present. (2Cor 13:5,
Titus 1:16 [note]) This is what
the letter of 1 John is all about - authentic saving faith manifests
fruit of a new creation in Christ. Be careful! Don't go back and bank
on your experience 30 years ago if you're not living that way now. If
you're not believing Him now, you didn't believe Him back then!
Don't misunderstand. This does not mean you can "lose your salvation"
(you can't lose something you never possessed!!!) Also this doesn't
mean you will never fail, but that you are constantly, consistently
being wooed by the Spirit within, constantly being pulled back to the
One that you committed to. (cp He 3:6, 14- notes
He 3:6;
14, Mt 24:13, etc)
2) FIRMLY ESTABLISHED & STEADFAST:
PERFECT PASSIVE (perfect
tense;
passive voice) --
The
passive voice
indicates the subject receives the action or effect from an outside
source (God did it = "Divine passive")
So Paul says that something happened to you in the past to ground you
and give you firm footing. (Ps 40:2 -
Spurgeon's note) Now Who is the foundation, the only
One Who can establish us? It is Christ. So we continue in the faith
(see note
Colossians 2:6), obeying Him and walking with Him because He is the object of
our faith. He alone is our Foundation, the Solid Rock (Mt 7:25-note) on
which we stand eternally righteous and beloved of the Father (cp holy,
blameless, beyond reproach Col 1:22). Glory to God's great plan of the
ages. To Him alone be all praise and honor. What a majestic
Most High God Who is Sovereign Over All
we are privileged to serve.
3) NOT MOVE AWAY FROM THE HOPE OF THE GOSPEL THAT YOU HAVE HEARD
--
What or Who is the "hope of the
gospel"? The Lord Jesus Christ. Then we focused on the Incomparable
Christ: Who He is-He is God. What He alone can do. You are continuing
in the faith obeying Him. Your foundation is Him because of something
that happened to you in the past. You've not moved away from the hope
of the gospel. Christ in you, the hope of glory. So Paul comes right
back to being Christ-centered. So we see what Christ alone can do.
Paul has been building doctrinal truth, but will soon begin to let
loose with the exhortations which will all make sense, because you
realize now WHO YOU ARE, WHAT YOU ARE, WHO'S YOU ARE & WHAT GOD WANTS
IN YOUR LIFE and then you can better understand the things Paul under
the moving of the Holy Spirit tells believers TO DO, that they may
work out their salvation in fear & trembling (Php 2:12, 13 - see notes
Philippians 2:12;
2:13) |
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