Volume 45, No. 21
Col 1:15-23
Sermon prepared by Rev. Eric Schuringa, Waterdown, Ont.
Proposed Order of Service
God Gathers His People
Call to Worship/Prayer for the Service
Opening Hymn: #238, “We Come O Christ to You”
God's Greeting
Mutual Greeting
Our New Life in Christ
Call to Confession: #262, “My Faith Looks Up to
Thee”
Words of Confession: Lord's Day 5, Q & A 12-14
(responsively)
Song of Assurance: #497 “How Vast the Benefits Divine”
God's Way: Q&A 15-18 (responsively)
Hymn of Dedication: #479, “I Will Sing of My Redeemer”
God Speaks His Word to Us
Prayer for Illumination
Scripture: Colossians 1:15-23
Sermon: “Knowing Jesus”
We Respond in Gratitude
Hymn of Response: #247, “All Glory Be to God on High”
Congregational Prayer
Offering
God Sends Out His People
Benediction
Closing Song: #633, “He is Lord”
Sermon
This is a sermon about the basics. It is about appreciating one
of the most basic truths of the Christian faith: knowing Jesus.
First, some background.Colossians was written to a church that
Paul did not start. It was started by one of his disciples, Epaphras.
Acts 19 tells us that when in Ephesus, Paul ran into opposition
in the city and so withdrew and taught some disciples — these
in turn went and planted churches in nearby towns and cities. The
church of Colosse was probably started in this way.
As churches tend to experience, the church at Colosse started
to have disagreements. Different leaders pulled in different directions
until Epaphras called upon Paul, in Rome, to tell him what was going
on. Paul wrote this letter in response.
The issue is often called the Colossian heresy, which is simply
another way of saying "the problems dealt with in the book
of Colossians." There were numerous issues dealt with and not
one specific problem. You might say the Colossian heresy was a colossal
heresy.
Not knowing these people, Paul is rather general in his writing,
which helps us get a brief picture of the basics of Christianity.
Colossians is a basic "curriculum for Christ-likeness"
or "discussion on discipleship". This letter teaches us
the basics of who we are in Christ and then challenges us to live
accordingly.
Against that background, this letter speaks to the church today.
The church in this time needs to recapture its distinctiveness.
We are in grave danger of becoming part of a cultural Christianity.
That is, a situation where Christianity and the broader culture
look quite similar. We are called to be salt and light — affecting
the world from within, without simply fitting in.
Henri Nouwen comments on what often happens in the church and
in the leadership of the church: "We simply go along with the
many musts and oughts that have been handed on to us, and we live
with them as if they were authentic translations of the Gospel of
our Lord. People must be motivated to come to church, youth must
be entertained, money must be raised, and above all everyone must
be happy." (The Way of the Heart New York: Ballantine
Books, 1981, p. 10)
The people of the church can be so focused on their activities
that they forget their very purpose as Church: to celebrate Christ
and make disciples in his name. We engage in good activities and
after some time begin to think that it is the activity itself that
counts. But the purpose of any activity is to teach us to go and
make disciples of all nations. (Matt 28: 18-20)
Being a disciple is going beyond doing what we are supposed to,
it is going beyond knowing our traditions and professing right beliefs.
Being a disciple is about giving ourselves to Jesus day by day in
accordance with those beliefs.
And so it is not surprising that the Colossian curriculum for
Christ-likeness starts (after an opening word of thanksgiving and
prayer) with a discussion of who Jesus is. We need to be clear about
who Jesus is, because anyone holding a half-formed belief in the
son of God cannot understand the gospel. We need to be diligent
about getting to know Jesus — know Jesus not only as an intellectual
exercise, but as a heart-changing, life-shaping discovery of a full
and abundant life.
Colossians 1 gives us some pictures to ponder.
First
"He is the image of the invisible God." Paul starts with
a paradox, an apparent contradiction. An image of the invisible.
How many of you have seen an invisible image or an image of something
invisible. It makes one think of an artist holding up a blank sheet
of white paper and naming it "Snowy white owl in a snowstorm"
or "cotton balls on a white sheet in the clouds".
The image of the invisible God. That is the amazing thing about
Jesus — he is God incarnate — God in carnal or fleshly
form. No one has ever seen God, for God is Spirit. Yet Jesus says,
"if you knew me, you would know my Father also." Jesus
is the image of God. He is a picture of God. The God we cannot finally
fathom, and who commands us not to try to make images of Him, comes
to us in tangible, touchable form in Jesus Christ.
Hebrews 1:3 puts it like this: "The son is the radiance of
God's glory and the exact representation of his being." Jesus
is exactly God — and he came and lived and walked among us.
John 1:18 "The Word became flesh and dwelt among us."
A fleshly word. What is that? Say a word and see if it becomes a
living thing. Say "dog" — doesn't produce a dog,
does it? Jesus as God walking among us is the miracle of a word
taking on physical fullness. God created with his words. He said
"let there be light" and there was light. Only God could
give us himself as one of us. Jesus is the image of the invisible
God.
Second
Jesus is the firstborn over all creation. The Jehovah's Witnesses
make a lot of this phrase saying that if Jesus is the firstborn
of creation he cannot be eternal with God because he is born.
They want to say that Jesus is the first creature, that he is created
and therefore not God and you should not worship him. But they are
missing the point. Firstborn is not about being born, but about
being the heir. The firstborn son is the heir of all that belongs
to the Father. He is not the first birth of the creation, but firstborn
over — the heir over creation. As firstborn he has the role
of being the inheritor of all authority. It is about his position,
his greatness.
That truth is backed up by the next words, the beginning of verse
16: "For by him all things were created." That same verse
ends "all things were created by him and for him." Verse
17 continues "He is before all things, and in him all things
hold together." Clearly Paul wants to leave no doubt of the
standing of Jesus. He is over all things. Jesus is the creator.
He is not created in the image of God as we were, but he is the
creative word that made all things. Jesus is the firstborn of creation,
not in the sense of being born, but in having the claim of authority
over all things. The claims of the Father are also the claims of
the Son — because they are one in a way more intimate than
anything we might imagine.
All of this is a very clear and strong way of saying that Jesus
is God — he is co-creator with God.
Third
Verse 18 says, "He is the head of the body, the church." What
this means is that the head of all creation is also the head of
the church. The powerful creator of this world came in human
form and started the organization we know as the church. He is
the head of this gathering and of us people who are the building
blocks
of that body, the church. That is an essen-tial claim. We have
as our head the one who created the world. We have as our teacher
and
guide the one who designed the planet and gave it a purpose.
Think of it this way. You are having trouble with your car. To
whom do you go? Do you go to someone who says, "I know how
to drive that car better than you do. I have more experience than
you do and I even wrote a book about it." Or do you go to the
one who can say "I designed that car. I came up with the idea
of an internal combustion engine, made it from scratch and added
all the other features that make it a precision vehicle."
Likewise with life. If you struggle in life, do you turn to someone
who says, "I'm just a fellow traveler with you. I have different
experiences, but yours count as much as mine." Or do you turn
to one who says "I am the way, the truth and the life"
"I created life, designed it and called it into being."
Put that way, the choice is pretty clear.
Jesus is more than a fellow traveler and more than a distant unknowable
god. He is a new beginning. In Jesus we have God himself walking
with us and guiding his body the church.
Fourth
"He is the firstborn from among the dead." First he
was firstborn over creation. Now he is firstborn of the dead. Again
this is about being the heir. But this time the heir inherits the
gift of life.
Jesus is the firstborn heir of life. He is the first one to be
more than resuscitated. We might want to point to Lazarus as someone
who was born from among the dead before Jesus. However, there is
this difference. Lazarus would die again. His was a miraculous healing
from death. It was a powerful act of God. Yet Lazarus would have
to go to the grave. Jesus was the first to be born again from
the grave in the new glorious body. Jesus was born from among the
dead never to die again.
The firstborn will have many younger brothers and sisters. Those
who believe are sons and daughters of God and co-heirs with Christ.
John 1:12 & 13 tells us "Yet to all who received him, to
those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children
of God — children born not of natural descent, nor of human
decision or a husband's will, but born of God."
Jesus, the creator of all things is head of this gathering, the
church, and is also the one who conquered our greatest enemy, even
death itself.
After the four statements of who Jesus is, we hear about his status
and his role: "so that in everything he might have supremacy."
Christ as God is the power over creation — he has supremacy
there. Christ is the head of his body the church — he has
supremacy there. Christ conquered death as firstborn from among
the dead — he has supremacy there.
The power of God over heaven and earth comes to us in our gracious
Savior Jesus Christ. This is a profound mystery: God himself taking
on human form and coming to live among us. "For God was pleased
to have all his fullness dwell in him." (verse 19) God
did this because he loved his world, his creation, his creatures
— us, enough to want to rebuild a healthy relationship with
us. In the words of verse 20 "to reconcile to himself all things,
whether things on earth or things in heaven."
After emphasizing how great and supreme Jesus Christ is over all
things, Paul ends his sentence and paragraph with a shocking twist.
How did this all-powerful over heaven and earth, Son of God heal
his relationship with creation? "Through his shed blood on
the cross." Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross was great,
particularly in light of the fact that he had everything. He had
it all, but for our sake he was despised and rejected, beaten and
spit upon, pierced and crucified. By his shed blood we are saved.
What a savior!
That is the Gospel in a nutshell. Jesus as fully God and fully
man reconnects the fullness of God with the fullness of creation.
"These are the facts as we have received them – these
are the things that the Christian believes." (Psalter Hymnal
#511) However, the whole point of discipleship is to recognize that
these are more than facts to be memorized. There is no multiple
choice quiz at the end of time. Heaven is not about passing a Bible
knowledge test at the end of time, but about passing a love test
today. Do you really know how great Jesus is? Learning about Jesus
is not so that we can win an argument with the Jehovah's Witness
at the door. We need to learn about Jesus so that we can be in awe
of his greatness. For when you know him you grow in your trust of
him.
Jesus is great over all things. He knows everything there is to
know about this world and about life here and hereafter. If Jesus
is really the master mechanic of the human body, the professor of
life studies, the wonderful counselor and the mighty God —
where are you going to go when you are having trouble in some area
of your life?
Discipleship is about following Christ. It is about knowing that
he is the master of more than morality. He is master of the world.
By the Holy Spirit, he can guide you into truth and wholeness. It
is one thing to speak the truth about Jesus, it is a far greater
thing to live out that knowledge.
It has been said, "we have to go beyond believing our confessions,
we must confess our beliefs." That is, we need to do more than
repeat what we have learned, we need to speak of a living relationship
with the living head of the church, Jesus Christ. Knowing Jesus
is more than memorizing facts, it is believing that in this person
is the supremacy in all things. Sometimes we want others to tell
us what we believe so we can simply take in a fact. But our journey
of discipleship is about connecting at the very core of our being
with the one who created us and saves us.
As a practical application let us consider how we interact with
people of other beliefs. For example, it has been mentioned a couple
times that Jehovah's Witnesses have a different understanding of
this passage and of Jesus. They deny that Jesus is God. Understanding
with our mind alone will not be enough in a discussion with them.
In fact, many Christians feel that the reason they have difficulty
in a discussion is because they do not know enough. If this causes
you to study God's Word more, great. But the fact is, you won't
help a Jehovah's Witness simply by playing their game. They draw
you into a game of meanings and interpretations.
Eventually you need to turn to the real source of your strength,
Jesus himself. Tell them that you are so in love with him as the
one who reveals himself as God and who went to the cross for us
that you can't believe anyone would want to talk you out of it.
Tell them that you feel sorry for them that they feel a need to
fix mental errors when the real issue is God's love and ours in
response. What we do not want to do is try to beat them at their
own game — as if our ability to argue better than they do
is what will win the battle.
The real question is this: if Jesus is the firstborn of creation
and the firstborn of the dead, the head of the world and of the
church, if all things are under his feet — then who do you
think is the one who will change things in this world, in this country,
in this church, in your family, in your life? Only God in Christ,
by the power of his Spirit. He is Lord, he is risen from the dead
and he is Lord. Unless you grab onto that truth and do all in your
power to better know that person, you have missed the gospel.
Why study discipleship? Why engage in the disciplines of the Christian
life? Because you believe that there is no one greater and therefore
there is nobody else who can help you in every situation. Don't
do religion. Don't simply believe a set of confessions, believe
in Jesus Christ — if he is the one the Bible claims he is
— then make job one in your life getting to know him better
and experiencing his love more deeply. There is no other purpose
that outweighs this relationship. Unless we hang onto and live by
that truth, we will miss out on the full joy of Christian life.
We have as head of the church, Jesus Christ, the Son of God himself,
who came to show us the way to life now and forever.
Amen.