Reflection on Colossians 2:6-10

Scripture
And now, as you accepted Christ Jesus as your Lord, you must continue to follow him. Let your roots grow down into him, and let your lives be built in on him.

Observation
When we accept Jesus as Lord, it is the start of the journey, not the end. We must continue to follow Him and put our roots deep into Him, building our lives on Him.

We must avoid the empty philosophies and other nonsense that come from human thinking and from satan.

All we need is Christ. He is the fullness of God in a body. When we are joined to Christ, our lives are complete.

Application
When we accept Jesus Christ as our Lord and Saviour, we start a lifetime of going deeper into God’s grace.

To follow Christ suggests that we are on a journey with Him that does not end.

Too many people think that Christianity is just about getting to heaven. They tick salvation off the to-do list and continue living in their customary way.

To follow. Jesus means we must constantly grow in our understanding of His ways. We learn to obey his commandments and to model our own lives on His life.

To let our roots grow down into Christ means that over time, He becomes the focus of our lifestyle, our choices, and our thoughts.

This is a big task, a lifelong journey.

We are allowed to take baby steps, but we must keep walking. Jesus is the way not the destination.

Prayer
Lord, you have called me to a life where your will comes first. Please help me to walk with you in all of my life. Amen.

Quote for the Day

If we take on this vocation, the principalities and powers – of whatever sort – will tell us to concentrate on heaven while they run the earth. Or they will warn us not to shove our religion down their throats, while they (of course) continue to shove their secular materialism and rampant hedonism down ours. We must not lose our nerve. Tom Wright

Reflection on Colossians 2:1-5

Scripture

I am telling you this, so that no one will deceive you with well-crafted arguments.

Observation

Paul has agonised for the believers at Colossae And nearby Laodicea, as well as many others whom he has never met. He wants them all to be encouraged and knitted together in love. He wants them to understand God’s plan of salvation through Christ.

Paul does not want them to be deceived by well-crafted arguments. Even though Paul is far away from them, his heart is with them.

Application

Paul is determined that the Colossians understand their hope of salvation in Christ and that nobody should come and snatch them away with arguments, lies, and deception.

At the time that Paul was writing, there were many alternatives to Christianity and the new churches being planted were seen as potential sources for new converts to these deceptive religions.

The two biggest threats to the church at that time were from Jewish believers who wanted to bring back the Law and from gnosticism,

In gnosticism, salvation comes from knowledge of secrets or mysteries. They would mix together all kinds of religions and set up a ladder of knowledge that would lead to salvation. This is one reason why Paul uses the word mystery so much. He is trying to oppose the gnostics by saying that Christ is the mystery and we can only be saved in Him.

We face different arguments in our day, whether from atheists who refuse the whole idea of faith, or modern gnostics who want to add things like Hebrew feasts and calendars or secret prophecies to the work of Christ.

We must still make sure that we avoid these deceptive well-crafted arguments and stay close to Christ.

Prayer

Lord, please help me to stay in your truth through your Word and Spirit. Amen.

Quote for the Day

Acts is not written, then, to describe examples of a ‘normal process’ of the spiritual development of individual believers. It is written to describe the one-off inauguration of a quite new reality. Pentecost, along with Good Friday, Easter and Ascension, constitutes the great turning point in the history of Israel and the world. Tom Wright