Showing posts with label Colossians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colossians. Show all posts

02 January 2022

“What Will We Wear?” (Colossians 3:11-17)

 


“What will we wear?” Back when I was first ordained, that was a question that many people asked themselves on a Sunday morning. In those days, people used to dress up for church. Tie straight, pants pressed, shoes polished… People would talk about putting on their Sunday best.

By and large, that kind of formality has gradually disappeared over the last twenty years or so—and I can’t say that I regret it! So I find it interesting that in the few verses we have read from the Bible this morning the apostle Paul stops to tell us how we in the church ought to dress. Of course, he is speaking not literally but metaphorically. And he is not referring just to Sunday mornings but to a whole way of life, twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.

But before we get too far into this passage, I want us to look at the brief snapshot that Paul gives us of the church in Colossae in the opening verse, because it was a truly remarkable collection of individuals. In Colossians 3:11 we are given a picture of the kind of people we might be likely to meet if we joined with the congregation there on a Sunday. There were Greeks and Jews, barbarians (and here he doesn’t literally mean what we do by “barbarian”, but people from distant lands, whose native language was not Greek or Latin). And finally, there were the Scythians, who had migrated from the north shore of the Black Sea and who really were regarded by and large as a crude, cruel and uncultured people. And if that were not enough, there were both slaves and their masters.

Nevertheless, there they all were in the Colossian church, singing together, learning together, sharing in the Lord’s supper together, serving Christ and proclaiming the good news together. And here we should pause to note that what was true of the Colossian Christian community by and large was true of the dozens of little clusters of believers that had begun to crop up all over the Roman Empire. It was a truly remarkable (dare I say revolutionary?) phenomenon. Indeed, they had already been accused of turning the world upside down (Acts 17:6).

Yet while those differences were a source of strength and something to celebrate, they also brought with them some potential pitfalls. Indeed, some of them were serious enough that they could easily have splintered the church into pieces. We see it happening as early as chapter 6 in the book of Acts, where a dispute arose over the assistance being given to the Jewish versus the Gentile widows. And much of the ink in Paul’s letters (and the other letters in the New Testament for that matter) was devoted to dealing with the cracks and divisions that cropped up and threatened to tear apart the fabric of the church.

The love of Christ

Now Paul is not suggesting that ethnicity and race, slavery and freedom, culture and heritage, are unimportant or insignificant. Far from it! In fact, Paul frequently drew from his own background when the occasion demanded it. Besides, that variety is what gives the church its flavour and richness. I was impressed a few weeks ago when someone pointed out that there were (was it eleven?) different nationalities represented here that morning. I leaned over to my wife and whispered, “This is a church that has a future!”

The problem was that the Colossians had allowed their differences to become sources of misunderstanding and annoyance, of not being entirely honest with one another, and of putting others down. The situation had led to the point where people had begun to sense that they didn’t have the freedom to be who they really were. As a result, they felt forced to wear a kind of costume.

At this point it is as though Paul turns and opens up a closet full of clothes. And he says to the Colossians, “This is what you should be wearing. Take off those costumes you’ve been putting on and try these clothes instead.” What were those clothes? Paul lists them for us in verse 12: compassion, kindness, humility, meekness, patience, forbearance, forgiveness…

Every one of those qualities has a beauty all of its own and we could give a whole sermon over to each of them. Yet Paul says that they are only the undergarments. For over them all we are to put on something that outshines and incorporates them all—which is love.

But let’s be clear. When we talk about love, we’re not talking about some airy-fairy feeling. It is that very practical Christian word agape—what one person has described as “a steady direction of the will towards another’s lasting good”[1]. It is the love with which God so loved the world. It is the love that led Jesus to give up his life for you and for me on the cross. It is the love that has been poured into our hearts through the gift of the Holy Spirit. It is the love that “bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things”. It is the love which, when everything else will have passed away, will still abide.

Now I am not saying that as Christians we cannot have our differences. The New Testament is very clear about that. There are some issues over which we cannot compromise and when sadly we must choose to walk apart. Yet I believe those issues are much rarer than we might think. And if we are willing to clothe ourselves in compassion, kindness, humility, meekness, patience, forbearance, forgiveness and above all love, many of our differences will begin to have far less importance and become small in comparison.

The peace of Christ

At this point Paul shifts our focus from what we put on the outside of our lives to what is happening on the inside. In verse 15 he calls upon us to “let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts”. What do you think of when you hear the word “peace”? Whenever I see it in the New Testament, I think of what Jesus said to his followers at the last supper: “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid” (John 14:27).

At that point Jesus was preparing his disciples for what would take place later that night, when he would be roughly dragged off by armed guards to await an unjust trial and a painful death. Their hearts must have been racing as those events unfolded uncontrollably around them. All they could do was to cling to Jesus’ promise. And in those times when nothing is going right and our lives seem to be spinning out of control, we can still bank on that promise today.

However, the peace that Paul is writing about in our passage this morning is something different. It is not so much internal peace as it is interpersonal peace.

I don’t believe that there is anything quite as unbecoming as a church fight. In the fourth century Athanasius got involved in a clash over the deity of Christ. In the fourteenth century John Wycliffe caused controversy through his conviction that the Bible was the final authority on the truth about God. In the sixteenth century Martin Luther became embroiled in a dispute over the question of salvation by faith. In the eighteenth century William Wilberforce in England and John Woolman in America engaged in a battle for the abolition of slavery.

Yes, there are issues worth fighting for. But disputes like the ones I’ve just listed are rare. And they make the clashes that happen in far too many churches today seem petty and insignificant by comparison. And why? Because for the most part they are insignificant. But the damage they do is incalculable. And the result is that people all too often end up leaving the Christian community altogether, while those on the outside see church people as fractious and combative. And in either case, the devil couldn’t be more delighted.

“Blessed are the peacemakers,” Jesus tells us, “for they will be called children of God” (Matthew 5:9). Peace doesn’t just happen. It takes effort. It has to be made. It requires humility and a willingness to swallow our pride. We may not always be successful. But at the same time, let us never forget that we follow one who brought about our peace at the cost of his life, through the blood of his cross (Colossians 1:20).

The word of Christ

Besides love, there is something else that Paul calls us to carry inside us—and that is the word of Christ. “Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly…,” he challenges us in verse 16. The word he uses for “richly” means “fully”, “abundantly”, “overflowingly”. One translation of this verse runs, “Be at home in the gospel story, and let it be at home in you, so that it may always be ready for use.”[2] Some time later Paul would tell his young apprentice Timothy, “All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the messenger of God may be competent, equipped for every good work” (2 Timothy 3:16-17).

I am impressed that a number of you have taken on the challenge of reading though the whole of the Bible in the course of the year. But I trust you won’t just do it in a mechanical fashion, so that twelve months from now, after you’ve read the last chapter of Revelation, you can slam your Bible closed and with a breath of relief pat yourself on the back and say, “I’ve done it!” No, each time you open your Bible ask the Holy Spirit to be your teacher and take time to let its words sink in and be absorbed into who you are on a daily basis.

In my Anglican tradition we have a prayer that calls upon us to “hear, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest” the Scriptures. That means that we need take in the Bible’s message with all our senses, to allow God’s message to reach down into us and to penetrate into our being in a whole variety of ways: on Sunday morning, through the proclamation of God’s word from the pulpit and as we sing it in worship and carry those spiritual earworms with us through the week; in small groups where we can reflect on it with other believers and learn from their experience; in taking time to read and meditate upon it daily; in making the effort to commit portions of it to memory so that, if you’re anything like me, you’ll find those verses popping back into your mind in your daily walk.

I can still remember the first Bible verses I memorized, not many months after I committed my life to Christ as a teenager. They were Psalm 119:9 and 11, and they were in the old King James translation: “Wherewithal shall a young man cleanse his way? By taking heed thereto according to thy word… Thy word have I hid in my heart, that I might not sin against thee.”

May God’s word be hidden in your heart—perhaps like the crocuses I planted in our garden back in the fall. A few months from now, just when I’m beginning to wonder whether spring will ever arrive, they will poke up through the surface of the ground and burst into bloom. The same is true of God’s word as we plant it in our hearts. It will surely bring beauty and meaning into our lives, often at those times when we need it most.

So, what will we wear? As this new year begins, I challenge you to take a look at the spiritual wardrobe that God has graciously provided for us in his Son Jesus Christ and through the power of the Holy Spirit. As each day begins, clothe yourself with those beautiful and lasting garments of compassion, kindness, meekness, humility, patience and forgiveness. But above them all may you put on that most excellent gift of love—the love that is ours in Jesus.

As you do so, may the peace of Christ rule in your hearts and the word of God dwell in you richly as together you seek live in the power of the Holy Spirit and to serve the Lord Jesus Christ throughout this year of 2022.



[1]     Stephen Neill, The Christian Character, 22

[2]       N.T. Wright quoting A.L. Williams, Colossians and Philemon (Tyndale NT Commentaries), 144

20 November 2016

“On His Majesty’s Service” (Colossians 1:1-14)



What a perfect day to celebrate an anniversary! I’m sure it wasn’t in anyone’s mind twenty-eight years ago, but this day is recognized in many church communities as the festival of Christ the King. (Some of you on your way here this morning may have noticed the sign outside St Thomas Aquinas proclaiming Jesus as King of all creation.) Many of those churches will be reading today from Colossians 1, beginning at verse 15, which runs as follows:
The Son is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. For in him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through him and for him. He is before all things, and in him all things hold together. And he is the head of the body, the church; he is the beginning and the firstborn from among the dead, so that in everything he might have the supremacy. For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him, and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross.
Those verses call us to look upwards to the incomparable splendour of the risen, ascended, glorified Lord Jesus Christ, enthroned at the right hand of God the Father. Few other passages in Scripture give us such an exalted picture of Christ, the unrivalled Lord of the church and indeed of all creation.
This morning, however, I want us to lower our sights a little, if you don’t mind, to look at the verses that immediately precede that passage. The apostle Paul is writing to his fellow believers in Colossae—and if I could hazard a guess, I suspect that that church still had a way to go before they would reach their twenty-eighth anniversary. But I believe we can learn some significant lessons from what Paul says both to them and about them. So, if you have a Bible with you, you might want to turn to the opening verses of Colossians, chapter 1.

Faithfulness

First-century letters always begin with the identity of the sender, followed by the name of the recipient. And take notice of how Paul addresses them in this case. They are “faithful brothers and sisters in Christ”. Now it seems to me that we must understand that word “faithful” in two senses. The first could almost go without saying: that is, that the brothers and sisters in Colossae were people of faith, men and women who had put their trust in Jesus as their Lord and Saviour. I have no need to tell you that faith in Jesus Christ is the foundation upon which the whole Christian life—and, by extension, the church—is built. The letter to the Hebrews makes it clear that “without faith it is impossible to please God” (Hebrews 11:6).
I well remember a young man who had begun attending a church where I once served. He was a genuine seeker and his quest went on for months and months. He joined us for one of our annual church retreats and at the closing service I noticed that he came forward to receive communion for the first time. Afterwards I asked him about it and he said to me, “John, I could have kicked myself. All this time I have been thinking that Christianity was about knowledge. Today it finally dawned upon me that it’s about faith—and I took that step.” Yes, it’s all about faith, putting our trust in Jesus Christ.
Yet if that were all Paul meant by “faithful”, he could just as easily have left the word out. Surely there has to be more to what he is saying. Surely what Paul is referring to is not merely their initial act of faith that brought them to Christ and into the church, but also their ongoing faithfulness to him. That’s why the Bible speaks of faith in terms of a race. It’s more than just getting off the starting line. It’s running with perseverance, keeping our eyes focused on Jesus, not giving in to exhaustion or to the world’s enticements, until we reach the goal.
This past week Maclean’s magazine published an article based on a recently conducted study of Protestant congregations in Canada. Their byline read, “An exclusive remarkable study finds that mainline Protestant churches that focus on the Gospel and prayer are growing, while those that don’t are in decline.” I consider that as something of a no-brainer, don’t you? However, the study concluded that churches were considerably more likely to be growing where the pastor and the congregation agreed with the statement, “Jesus rose from the dead with a real flesh-and-blood body leaving behind an empty tomb,” read their Bibles on a regular basis, believed that “God performs miracles in answer to prayers” and upheld that it was “very important to encourage non-Christians to become Christians”. The study also found that about two thirds of the attendees at churches where these statements were affirmed were under the age of sixty, whereas two thirds of those at churches that did not were over sixty.[1] If our churches are to prosper and grow, then faithfulness to Christ and to the gospel make all the difference.
Twenty-eight years ago First Congregational was born out of a spirit of faithfulness—out of a desire to be faithful to God’s word and obedient to Jesus Christ. God has blessed you over those years and I have no doubt that he will continue to bless you as you continue in faithfulness to Christ and to contend “with everything you have in you for this faith entrusted to us as a gift to guard and cherish” (Jude 3, The Message).

Fruitfulness

At this point we need to go farther. We need to recognize that faithfulness is not limited to adherence to a set of doctrinal standards or theological propositions. I know churches that are like that and they can be every bit as deadly as those that have left doctrinal standards behind—perhaps even more so! No, true faithfulness will inevitably lead us to action, or what Paul in this morning’s passage calls fruitfulness.
Twice he speaks about bearing fruit. In verse 6 he points to the gospel, the saving good news of Jesus, bearing fruit in their lives and growing throughout the whole world. Then in verses 9 and 10 he tells of his ongoing prayer that they “may live a life worthy of the Lord and please him in every way: bearing fruit in every good work…”
In all the world I can’t think of anything that I find more delicious than fresh fruit. What is usually the first section you encounter as you enter a supermarket? The fresh fruits. The grocery marketers know what they are doing when they place them right at the entrance. I remember when we lived in Halifax previously I planted a peach tree in our back yard. What a delight it was in late August to go out and pick a ripe, luscious peach warmed by the afternoon sun! So too, I believe, a church that is fruitful brings delight to the heart of God—Christian men and women and children in whose lives are seen those marvellous fruit of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control, what the New English Bible calls “the harvest of the Spirit” (Galatians 5:22-23).
It is clear from what Jesus taught his disciples in John 15 that this kind of fruitfulness is a consequence of faithfulness: “I am the vine,” he says to us, “you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing… This is to my Father’s glory, that you bear much fruit, showing yourselves to be my disciples” (John 15:5,8). It is as we remain connected to Jesus, as his life flows into us and through us, that we are able, as Paul teaches us in this morning’s passage, to “live a life worthy of the Lord and please him in every way: bearing fruit in every good work, growing in the knowledge of God”.
In its final chapter the Bible gives us a beautiful picture of the river of the water of life flowing through the city of God. “On each side of the river stood the tree of life,” John tells us, “bearing twelve crops of fruit, yielding its fruit every month. And the leaves of the tree are for the healing of the nations” (Revelation 22:2). Fruitfulness in the Bible is not just a matter of personal enrichment; it’s about making a difference in the world.
From the beginning you at First Congregational chose not to follow an isolationist route. Instead you chose to be fully engaged both with the wider Christian community (for example through Jesus to the Nations and Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship) and with the world (through such ventures as Sunday suppers and the Crisis Pregnancy Centre). There can be a sacrifice in that. It means that resources are often spread thin, people sometimes stretched to their limit. But I want to say that the sacrifice is worth it. And you here this morning are the living proof.

Fortitude

And so we have faithfulness and fruitfulness. And to these we can add a third “F”: fortitude. In far more ways than I can number the world is a very different place from what it was twenty-eight years ago. (And why should we expect otherwise?) The church that once was prominent on Canada’s social landscape has long been relegated to the sidelines. Indeed we are off the map altogether. A generation ago the church may have been regarded as outmoded or even comical. Today in many places Christians encounter overt hostility. I don’t need to tell you. You know as well as I do that as often as not nowadays Christianity is associated with narrow-mindedness, bigotry and intolerance—and, sad to admit, we have to take some of the blame for that.
Yet what we face in North America does not begin to compare with what many of our sisters and brothers are encountering in other parts of the globe. Last Sunday was the World Day of Prayer for Refugees. I am encouraged by the strength shown by our fellow believers in other parts of the world who find themselves under considerably greater pressure than we can imagine. When I was here a few weeks ago I told you how my previous congregation was “invaded” by more than a hundred Karen refugees from Burma. Some of them had spent their entire lives in a refugee camp. Others had been shot at and even shot, sliced with machetes, seen their relatives and neighbours murdered before their eyes. Their suffering for the cause of Christ at the hands of an authoritarian government is little known, and it has gone on for nearly seventy years. Yet their witness for Christ continues to burn brightly and in spite of vicious persecution the church continues to grow.
Their experience is replicated by believers in many other parts of the world, most notably in North Korea, Syria and Iraq. Compared to them, what we face in Canada are minor irritations. Nevertheless, it is easy to become disheartened. In our passage this morning, however, Paul says just the opposite. He challenges us to be strengthened—to look to the Holy Spirit to give us endurance and patience. He encourages us to remember that the darkness that surrounds us must inevitably yield to the kingdom of light. He reminds us that the frustrations of the present cannot begin to compare with the glory that awaits us.
As you look ahead to the next twenty-eight years, who knows what may await you around the corner? But one thing you can be sure of. You serve the King of heaven and earth and his will will not be thwarted. May you continue in faithfulness to him and to his word, in fruitfulness as you serve him in the world, and in fortitude as you learn to depend more and more on the power of the Holy Spirit.
I’d like to conclude with an old prayer that has been traditionally used on this Sunday and that seemed fitting for us this morning.
Stir up, O Lord, the wills of your faithful people;
that they, plenteously bringing forth the fruit of good works,
may by you be plenteously rewarded;
through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.