As such, Jesus is also Head over the church. He has reconciled all things to Himself through His death on the cross, making believers alive to God and setting them on the path to right living. This proper view of Christ served as the antidote for the Colossian heresy as well as a building block for Christian life and doctrine both then and now. Your view of Jesus Christ will impact every area of your life. He saw that the christological problems in the Colossian church had practical importance as well.
Believers have died with Christ; therefore, we need to die to our sins. We have also been raised with Christ; therefore, we must live well in Him and put on qualities that are motivated by Christian love. And because He is Lord over all, the life of the Christian is a life of submission to Jesus. Are you following after Jesus as you should?
Our faith in Jesus Christ should transform the relationships we have in every area of our lives—in our homes, our churches, and our world.
View Chuck Swindoll's chart of Colossians , which divides the book into major sections and highlights themes and key verses. Colossians — Paul warns against believing any false philosophy or tradition of men, including worshipping angels and going to extremes in denying oneself basic physical needs as a form of spiritual discipline.
Colossians — Paul exhorts the Saints to set their hearts on things which are above, to abandon the sins of their former lives, and to be merciful to one another. He gives instruction about how Saints should worship and then gives counsel to wives, husbands, children, parents, servants, and masters. He closes the Epistle to the Colossians with commendations, greetings, and final instructions and blessings. New Testament Seminary Teacher Manual. Introduction to the First Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians.
Introduction to the Second Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians. Introduction to the Epistle of Paul to the Philippians. Introduction to the Epistle of Paul to the Colossians. Introduction to the First Epistle of Paul to the Thessalonians.
It is likely that Epaphras founded the Colossian church Col. Philemon was a citizen of Colossae and an upright leader in that church. He also was a slaveholder whose slave Onesimus had escaped, had later encountered the Apostle Paul, and had responded to the gospel message about Jesus. In the letter to the Colossians, Paul addresses how our relationship to God through Jesus Christ affects us in the workplace.
Specifically, he writes about how slaves are to do their work for their masters and how masters are to treat their slaves. The letters to the Colossians and to Philemon are believed to have been written by Paul from prison sometime circa 60 to From prison, Paul had heard that the Colossian Christians, who had at one time been strong in their faith, were now vulnerable to deception about the faith , 8, 16, 18, 21—
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