Skip to main content

Colossians--Empty to Full


Today in our journey along Route 66 we come to Paul’s Letter to the Colossians... 

Author


In the early church this letter was universally accepted as a genuine letter of the Apostle Paul. In the 19th century some critical scholars came to be belief that the heresy which Paul refutes in chapter 2 was that of Gnosticism. The word “Gnosticism” comes from the Greek word “Gnosis” which means “knowledge”. The Gnostics believed that the world was created and ruled by a lesser divinity, a demiurge, and that Christ was an emissary of the remote supreme divine being. Furthermore, the Gnostics believed that Jesus had passed on to them, by word of mouth, secret knowledge of the one, true supreme being, enabling them alone to achieve redemption. 


Now, here’s the thing… the Gnostic heresy did not appear in its full-blown form until the second century. So, if the letter to the Colossians was addressing the Gnostic heresy, then it could not have been written until the second century and therefore was not written by Paul. At least, this was the theory of many scholars starting in the nineteenth century. 

However, the heresy that Paul attacks in Colossians 2 could well have been an early form of Gnosticism. Paul responded to the talk of “secret knowledge” by these proto-Gnostics in Colossae by emphasizing that in Christ “are hidden all the treasures of wisdom”.


Date

 

If this letter was written by Paul, then it was probably written around the same time as Ephesians, during Paul’s imprisonment in Rome in the early 60s of the first century. If the letter was not written by Paul, then it may have been written by some anonymous Christian writing in Paul’s name in the second century.

 

In either case, the letter is addressed to the Church at Colossae in south-west Asia Minor, modern-day Turkey. Colossae was on the great east-west trade route that led from Ephesus on the Aegean Sea to the Euphrates River. Though Colossae was once a major city in the region, by the first century it had become a second-rate market town, surpassed in importance by the neighboring towns of Laodicea and Hierapolis.


Themes


Why did Paul write this letter? Well, as I have already suggested Paul wrote this letter to address this sort of proto-gnostic heresy that was developing in Colossae. By reading Colossians we learn that this heresy must have been many-faceted. It had elements of ceremonialism (2:16-17), asceticism (2:21-23), angel worship (2:18), deprecation of Christ (1:15-20; 2:2-9), secret knowledge/gnosis, reliance on human wisdom and tradition (2:4-8). In response to this heresy, Paul exalts Christ as the very image of God (1:15), the Creator (1:16), the preexistent sustainer of all things (1:17), the head of the church (1:18), the first to be resurrected (1:18), the fullness of deity in bodily form (1:19; 2:9), and the reconciler (1:20-22).


Structure


The structure of Paul’s letter to the church at Colossae works out like this…

  1. Introduction (1:1-14)
  2. The Supremacy of Christ (1:15-23)
  3. Paul’s Labor for the Church (1:24-2:7)
  4. Freedom from Human Regulations through Life with Christ (2:8-23)
  5. Rules for Holy Living (3:1-4:6)
  6. Final Greetings (4:7-18)


Key Concept—Fullness in Christ


I would like to focus the rest of our time this morning on two verses. Listen for God’s word to you from Colossians 2:9-10…


For in Christ all the fullness of the Deity lives in bodily form, and in Christ you have been brought to fullness.


Emptiness


So many people experience spiritual emptiness. In fact, I think it is a universal human experience, though not every human being may recognize it. I have experienced it… this feeling of having a hole in the very center of my being… a hole that nothing seems to fill. 


Where does this emptiness come from? Why is it such a universal human experience? I believe the Scriptures provide us with an answer…


In Genesis 2:7 we read, 


Then the Lord God formed a man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being.


Now, you can take this verse to mean that God breathed physical breath into the first human being. But do you remember what I said some time ago about the two Greek words for life? There is Bios, which is the word for physical life. And there is Zoe, the word for spiritual life. In the Greek version of Genesis 2:7 it uses the word “Zoe”. God breathed into his nostrils the breath of Zoe, spiritual life.

So, in the beginning, human beings were filled with God’s Spirit. There was no emptiness. Adam and Eve had everything they needed in the Garden of Eden. God walked with them and talked with them there.


But then the first human beings disobeyed God, and I believe this led to a loss of the Spirit. God expresses this in Genesis 6:3 in these words, “My Spirit will not contend with human beings forever.” The disobedience of the first human beings led not simply to physical death, but spiritual death, a loss of the Holy Spirit. And, I believe, human beings have been experiencing spiritual emptiness ever since. The story of the Old Testament is largely the story of this emptiness and the attempt to fill the emptiness with things that do not satisfy. 


Isaiah 55:2 asks, “Why spend money on what is not bread, and your labor on what does not satisfy?”

And in Jeremiah 2:13 God says…


My people have committed two sins:
They have forsaken me,
    the spring of living water,
and have dug their own cisterns,
    broken cisterns that cannot hold water.


People try to fill their emptiness with things they think will satisfy. Money, power, sex, relationships, family, job, drugs… you name it… people have tried it… tried to fill this emptiness… all to no avail. People dig their own cisterns, but they are broken and cannot hold water.


This emptiness was once described by the 17th century philosopher, Blaise Pascal, in these words…


What else does this craving, and this helplessness, proclaim but that there was once in man a true happiness, of which all that now remains is the empty print and trace? This he tries in vain to fill with everything around him, seeking in things that are not there the help he cannot find in those that are, though none can help, since this infinite abyss can be filled only with an infinite and immutable object; in other words, by God himself. God alone is man’s true good . . . 


So, we try to fill the hole in our hearts with things and people and experiences that just do not fill the emptiness. Someone once paraphrased the words of Pascal and said that there is a God-shaped vacuum in the heart of every human being. That statement suggests both the core problem of humanity and the solution. But it still leaves the question, “How are we, weak human beings, to get God into our vacuum?”


Even religious people feel empty and find it impossible to fill their emptiness. I believe that is true because even religion will not fill the hole in our hearts. Every religion in the world is an attempt, merely an attempt, to reach up and grab hold of God, or some idea of perfection. And, I believe, every religion fails in the attempt.


Thankfully, we have not been left in our emptiness. I believe God himself has taken the initiative to fill our emptiness with himself. And here is how he went about doing just that…


The Fullness of Deity


God became a human being in Jesus of Nazareth. As Paul puts it, “In Christ all the fullness of the Deity lives in bodily form.” Colossians 2:9 has ten words in Greek, ten words that sum up the central doctrine of Christianity.


The word “lives” in Greek is an interesting one. It is the word κατοικέω and it means “to settle down as a permanent resident in a fixed, permanent dwelling place as one’s personal residence.” The word means “to be exactly at home”. In other words, the fullness of deity dwells in Jesus as a permanent resident and God is exactly at home there. Isn’t that wonderful?

The Greek word for fullness is πλήρωμα. The word is used in Classical Greek to speak of ships being filled with freight. The freight we were designed to carry is the presence of God through the Holy Spirit.

C. S. Lewis once said that God is the fuel that the human machine was designed to run on. And when we don’t have God’s Spirit in us, the machine conks out.


Have you ever run out of gas? It used to happen to me all the time when I first started driving. Why? Because I never planned for a pit stop. I was always in too much of a hurry to stop and get gas. So, like the Jackson Brown song, I was always “running on empty”.


But I don’t believe that ever happened to Jesus. Jesus did not have merely some of God in him. Jesus completely embodied (σωματικς) the πλήρωμα (the fullness) of God. Paul was deliberately contrasting the fullness of God in Jesus with the proto-gnostic idea of God being distributed through a series of many intermediaries, each one diminishing the deity bit by bit. According to Paul, in Jesus there is no diminishing of the deity. There is only in Christ the fullness of God. Jesus never ran out of divine fuel.


One wonderful thing about Paul is that he does not have, simply, one way of describing what we call the Incarnation, God taking on human flesh. Listen to what Paul says in Philippians 2 about the Incarnation…


Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus,

who, though he existed in the form of God,
    did not regard equality with God
    as something to be grasped,
but emptied himself,
    taking the form of a slave,
    assuming human likeness.
And being found in appearance as a human,
he humbled himself
    and became obedient to the point of death—
    even death on a cross.


Did you catch that? Christ Jesus, who according to Colossians 2, is the fullness of deity dwelling in bodily form, this same Jesus is also the one who emptied himself. The Son of God, the Second Person of the Trinity, did not empty himself of deity when he became human. He emptied himself of the prerogatives of deity. He became a slave—our slave. He humbled himself… even to the point of death on a cross.


Jesus emptied himself… that we might become full. Jesus emptied himself all the way to the cross. Then three days later he rose again from the dead, leaving behind an empty cross, an empty tomb, and empty grave clothes, so that we could experience fullness…

 

Brought to Fullness


This leads us to the radical truth of Colossians 2:10. “In Christ you have been brought to fullness.” The fullness of deity dwelt in Jesus that we might be brought to fulness. That is the whole of Christianity in one sentence.


Irenaeus was one of the Early Church Fathers who lived in the second century. He battled, theologically, against the Gnostics. He wrote in his book entitled, Against Heresies: Gloria enim Dei vivens homo.” In English that may be translated as: “The glory of God is man fully alive.”


Paul does not spell out in Colossians 2:9-10 exactly how this happens. But to understand this more fully, let me return to what I said earlier about the Spirit…

God breathed into the first human beings the breath of spiritual life. But because of their disobedience, they lost the Spirit. So, how is the Spirit restored to humanity?


The Gospel of John answers that question with a story of something that took place after Jesus was raised from the dead. We read in John 20, beginning with verse 19…


On the evening of that first day of the week, when the disciples were together, with the doors locked for fear of the Jewish leaders, Jesus came and stood among them and said, “Peace be with you!” After he said this, he showed them his hands and side. The disciples were overjoyed when they saw the Lord.

Again Jesus said, “Peace be with you! As the Father has sent me, I am sending you.” And with that he breathed on them and said, “Receive the Holy Spirit.


John teaches us that we receive the Holy Spirit when Jesus breathes the Spirit into us, just as God breathed the breath of life into the first human beings. That’s how we receive fullness where once we experienced emptiness.


And if you want to experience that fullness starting today, you can. Jesus says in Luke 11:13…


If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!


If you want to experience God filling your emptiness, ask for the Holy Spirit and the Father will give him to you. The Spirit of Jesus living in you will impart the fullness of joy, the fullness of peace, the fullness of forgiveness, the fullness of love. And once we are in Christ, and Christ is in us, then we can begin to live out of the fullness of God’s Spirit instead of our own human emptiness. And the prayer of St. Francis will become our prayer and our deepest desire…


Lord, make me an instrument of your peace:
where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
where there is sadness, joy. 

O divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console,
to be understood as to understand,
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive, 
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned, 
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
Amen.

 

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

C. S. Lewis on Homosexuality

Arthur Greeves In light of recent developments in the United States on the issue of gay marriage, I thought it would be interesting to revisit what C. S. Lewis thought about homosexuality. Lewis, who died in 1963, never wrote about same-sex marriage, but he did write, occasionally, about the topic of homosexuality in general. In the following I am quoting from my book, Mere Theology: A Guide to the Thought of C. S. Lewis . For detailed references and footnotes, you may obtain a copy from Amazon, your local library, or by clicking on the book cover at the right.... In Surprised by Joy , Lewis claimed that homosexuality was a vice to which he was never tempted and that he found opaque to the imagination. For this reason he refused to say anything too strongly against the pederasty that he encountered at Malvern College, where he attended school from the age of fifteen to sixteen. Lewis did not rate pederasty as the greatest evil of the school because he felt the cruelty displa

Fact, Faith, Feeling

"Now Faith, in the sense in which I am here using the word, is the art of holding on to things your reason has once accepted, in spite of your changing moods. For moods will change, whatever view your reason takes. I know that by experience. Now that I am a Christian I do have moods in which the whole thing looks very improbable: but when I was an atheist I had moods in which Christianity looked terribly probable. This rebellion of your moods against your real self is going to come anyway. That is why Faith is such a necessary virtue: unless you teach your moods 'where to get off', you can never be either a sound Christian or even a sound atheist, but just a creature dithering to and fro, with its beliefs really dependent on the weather and the state of its digestion. Consequently one must train the habit of Faith." Mere Christianity Many years ago, when I was a young Christian, I remember seeing the graphic illustration above of what C. S. Lewis has, here, so

C. S. Lewis Tour--London

The final two days of our C. S. Lewis Tour of Ireland & England were spent in London. Upon our arrival we enjoyed a panoramic tour of the city that included Westminster Abbey. A number of our tour participants chose to tour the inside of the Abbey where they were able to view the new C. S. Lewis plaque in Poets' Corner. Though London was not one of Lewis' favorite places to visit, there are a number of locations associated with him. One which I have noted in my new book,  In the Footsteps of C. S. Lewis , is Endsleigh Palace Hospital (25 Gordon Street, London) where Lewis recovered from his wounds received during the First World War.... Not too far away from this location is King's College, part of the University of London, located on the Strand, just off the River Thames. This is the location where Lewis gave the annual commemoration oration entitled The Inner Ring  on 14 December 1944.... C. S. Lewis occasionally attended theatrical events in London.

The Shepherds' Perspective on Christmas

On December 21, 2015, the following headline appeared in the International Business Times: “Bethlehem Christmas 2015 Cancelled”. To be fully accurate, religious celebrations of Jesus’ birth went forward last year in Bethlehem, but many of the secular celebrations of Christmas that usually surround it were toned down due to instability in the area. Looking back a decade, there was even one year when Christian Arabs canceled community celebrations of Christmas in support of the Palestinian uprising. However, the Jewish government would have no part of that, so the Israeli military sponsored its own holiday celebrations in the area. It is also interesting to note who celebrated the first Christmas and who didn’t. The first Christmas was not celebrated by the emperor Caesar Augustus, nor Quirinius, the governor of Syria, nor was it celebrated by the lowly innkeeper. But Christmas was celebrated by a few lonely shepherds along with Joseph and Mary and the angels of heaven. How

C. S. Lewis on Church Attendance

A friend's blog written yesterday ( http://wesroberts.typepad.com/ ) got me thinking about C. S. Lewis's experience of the church. I wrote this in a comment on Wes Robert's blog: It is interesting to note that C. S. Lewis attended the same small church for over thirty years. The experience was nothing spectacular on a weekly basis. For most of those years Lewis didn't care much for the sermons; he even sat behind a pillar so that the priest would not see the expression on his face. He attended the service without music because he so disliked hymns. And he left right after holy communion was served probably because he didn't like to engage in small talk with other parishioners after the service. But that life-long obedience in the same direction shaped Lewis in a way that nothing else could. Lewis was once asked, "Is attendance at a place of worship or membership with a Christian community necessary to a Christian way of life?" His answer w

Does the Bible mention treating animals with kindness?

When I solicited questions to be addressed in this series, a member of the congregation wrote this to me: “Animals are mentioned in the Bible as beasts of burden and sacrificial animals.  Is there any mention of treating animals with kindness?” The short answer to that question is: yes. However, it is important to note that what the Bible says about caring for animals comes in the midst of a great narrative. It is a narrative of  Creation, Fall, and Redemption.  Let’s look at these three great acts in the narrative play of world history one by one. First, let’s look at creation. Creation At the very beginning of the Bible, in the book of Genesis, chapter 1, verses 26 through 28, we read this: Then God said, “Let us make humankind in our image, according to our likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the birds of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the wild animals of the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps upon the

A Prayer at Ground Zero

Christmas Day Thought from Henri Nouwen

" I keep thinking about the Christmas scene that Anthony arranged under the altar. This probably is the most meaningful "crib" I have ever seen. Three small woodcarved figures made in India: a poor woman, a poor man, and a small child between them. The carving is simple, nearly primitive. No eyes, no ears, no mouths, just the contours of the faces. The figures are smaller than a human hand - nearly too small to attract attention at all. "But then - a beam of light shines on the three figures and projects large shadows on the wall of the sanctuary. That says it all. The light thrown on the smallness of Mary, Joseph, and the Child projects them as large, hopeful shadows against the walls of our life and our world. "While looking at the intimate scene we already see the first outlines of the majesty and glory they represent. While witnessing the most human of human events, I see the majesty of God appearing on the horizon of my existence. While

Sheldon Vanauken Remembered

A good crowd gathered at the White Hart Cafe in Lynchburg, Virginia on Saturday, February 7 for a powerpoint presentation I gave on the life and work of Sheldon Vanauken. Van, as he was known to family and friends, was best known as the author of A Severe Mercy , the autobiography of his love relationship with his wife Jean "Davy" Palmer Davis. While living in Oxford, England in the early 1950's, Van and Davy came to faith in Christ through the influence of C. S. Lewis. Van was a professor of history and English literature at Lynchburg College from 1948 until his retirement around 1980. A Severe Mercy tells the story of Davy's death from a mysterious liver ailment in 1955 and Van's subsequent dealing with grief. Van himself died from cancer in 1996. It was my privilege to know Van for a brief period of time during the last year of his life. However, present at the White Hart on February 7 were some who knew Van far better than I did--Floyd Newman, one of Van&

Glenmerle

Glenmerle in the 1950s In 2013 I published a biography on one of my favorite authors, Sheldon Vanauken. If you are interested, you can learn more and/or purchase a signed copy here:  Signed Copy  or an unsigned copy here:  Amazon . One of the things that got me writing the book was my search for the location of Glenmerle, Vanauken's childhood home, so lovingly described in his book, A Severe Mercy . A visit to Van's alma mater, Staunton Military Academy, alerted me to the fact that Van grew up in Carmel, Indiana. Then, with the help of a local historian, we identified the location of Glenmerle.  Because Van had suggested, in my first conversation with him, that Glenmerle was destroyed, I naturally assumed that the house no longer existed. However, another one of Van's fans recently contacted me to let me know that she believed she had found Glenmerle still in existence. I was able to look up the house on a real estate web site and compare current interior photos o