Other than unbelief -- choosing not to believe all of God's Word --
the greatest deficiency of most Christians is not understanding the
Old Covenant vs. the New Covenant. There is a critical distinction,
and many believers live in confusion and bondage. I address this problem
is my essay, "Christians and the Law of Moses," available
at http://choicesforliving.com/spirit/part4/lawofmoses.htm.
In addition, in the magazine Proclamation! (a magazine ministry
to former Seventh-Day Adventists by ex-SDA pastors), I discovered an
excellent article by Dr. R. K. McGregor Wright, a commentary on Colossians
chapter 2. I contacted Dr. Wright and he gave me permission to share
it. Enjoy.
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COLOSSIANS 2 ON THE LAW
Col 2:10-23, Verse by Verse
Dr. R. K. McGregor Wright
Preamble
Behind the letter to the Colossians, there was a serious
Gnostic-type of legalistic and mythical teaching. It was called “the
Colossian Heresy” by such scholars as J. B. Lightfoot, and it
seems to have had features similar to legalisms that believers face
today. Food regulations, angel-worship, and the keeping of Jewish holy
days and periods were being imposed on Christians by these false teachers
from the Old (Mosaic) Covenant. Paul appeals to the work of the cross
to explain why those observances are not relevant for us under the new
covenant today. By the middle of the second century, these ideas Paul
opposed were to evolve into the full-blown sects called Gnosticism,
but Paul already had to combat their beginnings in his own day.
The first seven verses of the chapter state the preeminence of Christ
over all merely human philosophies and life-styles. The Christian life
is to be lived on the very same principle on which it was entered, by
faith in Christ alone (v. 6). We received him by faith, and we must
“walk in him” (live our lives) likewise by faith, by trusting
the One whom we know has spoken Truth to us. It is Christ who is the
Source of all wisdom and knowledge. The Incarnate Logos himself is the
final exegesis (exegesato, Jn 1:18) of all God’s Truth because,
in the words of a well-known statement of the Incarnation, the complete
fullness of Deity dwells in Jesus “bodily” (v. 9a).
Paul is now going to expound the Source of the eternal life we have
received, which is emphatically not the Law, but “Christ, who
is our life” (3:4). There are very good reasons for this perspective,
as Paul will now tell us. Open your Bible and follow along through the
comments.
Verse 10: …and in Him you have been made complete, and
He is the head over all rule and authority;
Jesus is himself the fullness of the Godhead, and we, too, receive our
fullness of spiritual life from him. He is the true source of “all
rule and authority.” The term kephale (KJV head) here means “source”,
not “boss,” as its use in verse 19 shows clearly enough.
Gnostic demons and archons have no authority with Jesus, and they cannot
provide a true revelation from God.
Verse 11: and in Him you were also circumcised with a circumcision
made without hands, in the removal of the body of the flesh by the circumcision
of Christ;
All “in Christ” have been circumcised with the divine and
supernatural circumcision of the heart Jeremiah predicted for all those
who are in the new covenant, having come to “know the Lord”
(Jeremiah 31:33-34). This “Christian circumcision” is “without
hands,” a phrase borrowed from Daniel 2:45 where it describes
the coming kingdom of Christ. Paul stated in 1:13 that believers have
already been translated into God’s kingdom, and in this verse
we learn how: by regenerationthe new birth. This new birth ends
the rule and reign of “the body of flesh,” or the body of
sin, which is described and condemned by the old covenant Law (v. 14).
Verse 12: having been buried with Him in baptism, in which you
were also raised up with Him through faith in the working of God, who
raised Him from the dead.
This transition from the old to the new covenant was symbolized visibly
by our water-baptism, which Peter says presupposes we are believers
with a cleansed conscience (1 Pet 3:21). Baptism combines the significance
of three components of our transfer into the new covenant: God’s
judgment, our testimony to our new faith, and our cleansing from the
corruption of sin. Just as circumcision in Israel pointed forward to
believers’ hearts being circumcised and cleansed from sin by acceptance
of Christ’s eventual death and resurrection, so on this side of
the cross, baptism looks back to what God has done for the individual
in Jesus’ sacrifice and resurrection. The visible act of baptism
also depicts our being raised spiritually with Christ and points forward
also to our final bodily resurrection. Just as God raised Christ from
the dead, so also he raises us to a newness of life “by faith”,
or trust, in the work that God has done in saving us. Our salvation
is just as much a miracle of God’s sovereignty as Jesus’
own resurrection was.
Verse 13: When you were dead in your transgressions and the
uncircumcision of your flesh, He made you alive together with Him, having
forgiven us all our transgressions,
Baptism represents something else, too; we start out “dead in
transgressions and sins,” (as he has already said in Ephesians
2:1), and must be “made alive,” (regenerated), a blessing
also found “in Him”. This blessing results in complete forgiveness,
not just of past sins, but of “all our transgressions,”
all our large and petty failures, now and in the future, to meet the
standard of God’s own righteousness. The phrase “buried
with him in baptism” is probably an allusion to Christ’s
own baptism, which was a public testimony announcing his Messiahship
to Israel (John 1:31). Our baptism is likewise a public testimony to
our belonging to him and announces our discipleship. Moreover, Jesus
called his death a “baptism” in Matthew 20:22-23. Further,
Jesus’ own resurrection life is the real source of our regenerate
life. Both Jesus’ resurrection and our regeneration are equally
God’s work, not ours, and when we obey the promptings of the Spirit
who regenerates us, good works follow to manifest our faith (Eph 2:10).
The faith which alone saves is never alone, as James makes clear in
2:14, and Paul in Galatians 5:6.
Verse 14: having canceled out the certificate of debt consisting
of decrees against us, which was hostile to us; and He has taken it
out of the way, having nailed it to the cross.
Our forgiveness is based on the fact that the handwriting of the Law
which condemned us (“which was hostile to us”), God himself
removed from the equation, nailing it to the cross. This removal of
the lawthe entire Mosaic law including the Decalogueliterally
occurred as a public testimony to the passing of the old covenant, when
Jesus the Incarnate Torah took his perfect obedience to the cross and
was nailed there in the very same body in which resided “the fullness
of the Godhead bodily” (verse 9). Thus the dying of Jesus terminated
the old law completely, and his resurrection proclaimed a new day under
the new covenant. In the same instant that Jesus died as my substitute
(Matthew 20:28 the ransom is said to be anti, Greek for “instead
of” the “many”), the new covenant was also substituted
for the old, wholly replacing it as the believers’ rule of life.
Further, just as the old covenant was replaced by the new, so when we
are born again, Christ’s resurrection life replaces our old life
which God has set aside as worthless.
Just as the old covenant could never sanctify the sinner, so our fleshly
body of sin cannot generate righteousness, “for no flesh shall
be justified (declared righteous) by the Law.” Jesus’ own
“active and passive obedience” literally is the white robe
of righteousness in which He clothes us when we are regenerated. Without
this robe of Jesus’ own obedience covering us, nobody could be
saved, because even after we are born again, we do not achieve moral
perfection. The Law’s job was merely to identify (Romans 2:20)
and to increase sin (Romans 5:20) and to point toward the dying Messiah
(as in Isaiah 53). Now, on this side of the cross, our debt is cancelleda
debt that an eternity in Hell could never pay. As Isaiah says, (Isaiah
53:11), “He [Jehovah] shall see the travail of his [the Son’s]
soul and will be satisfied.”
The Old Testament text is still the inerrant word of God under the New
Covenant. The Old Testament law, typology, and promises still point
to Christ, as they always did. In fact, they are the means by which
we know that Jesus is the promised Messiah. Under the new covenant,
however, we preach the Torah as embodied in Jesus and imputed to us
in our justification. The law has been abolished as a requirement of
obedience. “Cast out the bondwoman and her son” (Galatians
4:30) does not mean, “Give her a separate bedroom and keep her
on; she’ll be useful for defending ourselves against the antinomians.”
Rather, it means the old covenant has no place in the new covenant household
of God.
Verse 15: When He had disarmed the rulers and authorities, He
made a public display of them, having triumphed over them through Him.
The fulfillment of the long-promised redeeming atonement in space-time
history by Jesus’ death vindicated God’s sovereignty in
the salvation of believers. Against all the machinations of the devil
and his minions, in the most public way possible, God defeated the powers
of evil by the death of his Son. The cross didn’t kill Jesus,
for he was not on it long enough. Rather, His death was a voluntary
act; He “gave up his spirit,” having cried, “It is
finished” (John 19:30).
Verse 16: Therefore no one is to act as your judge in regard
to food or drink or in respect to a festival or a new moon or a Sabbath
day
THEREFORE. This important copulative must not be glossed over. The whole
point of the passing from the old to the new covenant by means of Jesus’
taking the Torah to the cross in His flesh is about to be revealed!
Therefore, nobody may judge the Christian for not obeying the details
of the Mosaic Law. The Law has been “put out of the way”
by God himself. Even the Sabbath is abolishedall of them! (sabbat
n, Sabbaths plural).
Verse 17: things which are a mere shadow of what is to come;
but the substance belongs to Christ.
Food laws and Sabbaths were mere shadows of the real things to come,
and we now have the real things. Jesus Himself is the substance of those
shadows. Further, the Body of Christ is the present reality, since we
no longer have Jesus bodily with us (2 Corinthians 5:16). Instead, His
resurrection life is lived out through the Church as the Body of Christ,
through which He acts now in the world. His body encompasses both Gentiles
and Jews (whom the Mosaic food laws were meant to separate), and His
body also enjoys the perpetual Sabbath-rest promised for God’s
people who enter His rest (Hebrews 4:7, 9-10).
Verse 18: Let no one keep defrauding you of your prize by delighting
in self-abasement and the worship of the angels, taking his stand on
visions he has seen, inflated without cause by his fleshly mind,
Don’t let anyone trick you (seduce you) into schemes of sanctification
by Law-keeping. The “mystery religions” of those days had
all sorts of occult techniques of approaching the unseen world through
legalism, asceticism, the worship of angels, and occult speculations
here condemned. Observers of those mystery religions pompously imagined
that through those things they could enter the unseen world! The “mind
of the flesh” contains no glimmer of the true Light, which finally
entered the world with Jesus (John 1:8-13).
Verse 19: and not holding fast to the head, from whom the entire
body, being supplied and held together by the joints and ligaments,
grows with a growth which is from God.
The “Colossian heretics” did not “grasp the Source”
of their spiritual growth. Instead of spiritual growth being accelerated
by occult techniques or special knowledge and observances, the Source
of their growth was the risen Christ, the Head (Source) from which the
Body is fed and nourished. All the body’s parts (each Christian)
receive gifts from God (1 Corinthians 12:7 and following) with which
to serve the body as a whole. Thus, the growth of the body in grace
is “of God.” The work of sanctification is not just for
the purpose of individual growth but is also for the health of the whole
Body.
Verses 20-22: If you have died with Christ to the elementary
principles of the world, why, as if you were living in the world, do
you submit yourself to decrees, such as, “Do not handle, do not
taste, do not touch!” (which all refer to things destined to perish
with use)in accordance with the commandments and teachings of men?
The Greek word for “rudiments” (stoicheia) is deliberately
ambiguous. It commonly meant not only the “elements” of
nature, but also the axioms or basic structural principles of a philosophy
of life. Similarly, this word applied to the law as a pattern of living.
Christ frees us from the erroneous philosophies of the world (verse
8), with their false and enslaving presuppositions, the stoicheia (basic
principles or axioms) of the Greek philosophers. Likewise, we are freed
from the earth-bound principles of the law. This is remarkably negative
language for a Jew! It shows how strongly Paul felt about the complete
passing of the old covenant, and how personally he knew the seductive
power of legalism in any form. As a highly-committed Pharisee, he had
trod that tiresome path himself and wanted to save the Colossian believers
from going that way.
The verse also contains a warning against dependence on “the traditions
of men”, a subject which became a big issue between Rome and the
Reformers in the Reformation era. Romanist salvationism has been highly
legalistic since the early Middle Ages. In that system, the believer
is required to “merit the merits of Christ” through the
sacraments and by obedience to the hierarchy from the Pope down. When
Jesus died as our representative and substitute, however, we died also
in Him to the law. Why then, should we submit to traditionalist legalisms?
This question cannot be answered affirmatively from the Bible; In fact,
we shouldn’t.
Verse 23: These are matters which have, to be sure, the appearance
of wisdom in self-made religion and self-abasement and severe treatment
of the body, but are of no value against fleshly indulgence.
Following these “teachings of men” provides an outward show
of wisdom and humility, of “self-made religion” (NASB) and
abuse of our bodies by ascetic practices. Paul, however, is explicitly
clear about these things: they have no value and cannot protect us against
fleshly indulgence. In fact, they may be demonic (1 Tim 4:1-5).
Conclusion: The Law tells us what sin is, that it is
“exceedingly sinful” (Romans 7:13), and that it is repugnant
in God’s sight. That’s the bad news. The law also pointed
to Christ, leading like those slaves who led children to school in the
Greek world (the paidogogoi of Gal 3:24). Today it continues to stand
as the witness of Christ, identifying Him as the only One who completely
fulfilled all its righteous requirements.
Now, however, we live under a very different covenant, and this new
covenant is “not like” the Old (Heb 8:9), which could be
“broken” by the sinners with which it was made. This new
covenant is based on “two unchangeable things,” God’s
oath and God’s promise only, and He will never break His word,
as Jesus said in John 10:35. Paul confirms this fact in 2 Timothy 2:13,
for “he cannot contradict himself.” Jesus Himself guarantees
the new covenant. That’s the good news of the Gospel.
In their determination to show how the law is still “relevant”
to the believer, the Puritans of the 15-1600s often preached a “third
use of the law” which reestablished it as the rule of life for
the Christian. This preaching was a disastrous move and led to the theory
today called theonomy which brings all of life once more under the curse
of the law. Either Jesus took this curse upon himself, or it still rests
on every believer, and nobody is saved. But no theonomist could have
written the highly negative evaluation of the Mosaic law we find in
Hebrews 8:13 and 7:18; “When he said ‘a new covenant’
he has made the first obsolete. But whatever is becoming obsolete and
growing old, is ready to disappear.” And “there is a setting
aside of the former commandment because of its weakness and uselessness,
for the Law made nothing perfect….”
Attentive readers will draw their own conclusions.
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Commentary Sources
Bruce, F. F. Colossians, Philemon and Ephesians (in Eerdman’s
New International Commentary on the New Testament, 1984)
Good modern commentary by the most famous evangelical commentator in
the mid-20th century. Very high quality, and easy to understand.
Clark, Gordon H. Colossians (1979, reprinted currently by Trinity Foundation)
Very clear and helpful shorter exposition by a great Christian philosopher
and Greek teacher.
Davenant, John. An Exposition of the Epistle to the Colossians (Latin
1627, ET 1831, reprinted 1979)
A superb example of a Puritan Bishop’s exposition from a Reformed
Anglican pulpit. Very helpful.
Gill, John. Colossians in his six-volume Exposition of the whole Bible
(1700s, often reprinted). Gill was a Calvinistic Baptist, and a moderate
Covenantalist, the only man in history to preach through every verse
of the Bible and publish it as a commentary.
Lightfoot, John B. Colossians and Philemon (1879, and often reprinted)
A classic commentary on the Greek text of these two letters by one of
the great Anglican teaching Bishops of Durham. Contains a good account
of the “Colossian heresy” in an introductory essay. Very
helpful even if you can’t read much Greek or Latin.
Vaughn, Curtis. Colossians (in Volume 11 of Zondervan’s Expositor’s
Bible Commentary, 1978)
Another shorter commentary in a larger set on the whole Bible. This
conservative set is excellent for ready-reference, as it covers the
whole Bible in twelve volumes.
Readers are also directed to the fullest and most accurate account from
the 1800s, of the doctrine of the Atonement in the New Testament, the
superb study by Thomas Crawford, The Scripture Doctrine of The Atonement.
My copy is the fifth edition of 1888, but it has been reprinted since.
It is effectively a commentary on every verse dealing with the nature
of Christ’s atoning death. Unusually helpful.
The best book on the NT terminology for the Atonement is Leon Morris’
The Apostolic Preaching Of The Cross (Eerdmans, Third Edn., 1965).
© AQUILA AND PRISCILLA STUDY CENTER. (423) 434-2188.
E-mail rkwjc@charter.net
The above article was published in Proclamation magazine, November-December
2007.
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