STUDYING THE BOOK

Introduction and summary of
Colossians

Twelfth book of the New Testament, between Philippians and Thessalonians; written about 60 A.D. by Paul the prisoner (1:1; 4:18) to the church in Colosse (1:2), a city in Asia Minor

The church in Colosse was . . .

  • a church Paul did not know personally (2:1)
  • visited by Epaphras on Paul's behalf (1:7, 8; 4:12, 13)
  • a twin church to Laodicea (2:1; 4:13-16)
  • threatened by false teachers (2:4, 8, 16, 18)

The Colossian letter . . .

  • promotes the deity of Christ and His superiority over every competitor in the marketplace of ideas (1:15-19; 2:8-23)
  • contains several classic passages: a hymn to Christ (1:13-18); a centerpiece (3:1-4); and a description of the beautiful life (3:12-17)
  • has a literary twin: over 50 of its 95 verses are mirrored in the words and message of the epistle to the Ephesians
  • easily divides into theological (chs. 1, 2) and practical (chs. 3, 4) sections

First half (chs. 1, 2)

These halves are twice condensed into single verses:
"As you have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in Him" (2:6).
"If then you were raised with Christ, seek those things which are above" (3:1).

Second half (chs. 3, 4)

Mystery and glory of the gospel
Christ is the bodily image of God's fullness. He created and sustains the universe. He redeemed and reconciled us to God by His death on the cross. With us in Him and He in us, we'll be perfect in God's sight as long as we continue in this faith. Christ is all-sufficient (1:11-29; 2:1-3, 9-15; 3:11)!

Interference with the gospel
Some semi-Christian teachers (pre-gnostics) were evidently attempting to infect the church with their human philosophies and traditions (2:8). They taught allegiance to pseudo-spiritual principalities, powers, and angels; they urged obedience to worldly principles and doctrines of asceticism (2:15, 18, 20-23). The result was a toxic mixture of legalism and mysticism that boasted Jewish, Christian, and Greek elements.

Debated questions

Colossians in a sentence: To avoid being cheated and judged by others' self-imposed regulations and additions to the gospel, Christians must hold fast to the preeminent, redeeming Christ alone, while they are recreated in His image by putting on the fruits of holiness.