As we listened to that passage from Colossians this morning, the first
thing we heard Paul telling his readers to do was to clothe
yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, goodness and patience..
As we listened to that list of qualities various things could have gone
through our minds. We may well have listened to the list and thought; "Yes,
that's the ideal character. That's the sort of person I'd like to be".
Some may have thought, "Well! That is me! That reflects me; that
really is me!" If you thought that you've probably got something of a problem.
Or you could have thought: "Well, that's a weak kind of character.
That's not the sort of person who's going to cut any ice in today's world. To
get on in today's world you've got to show very different sort of
characteristics. There's no point in being compassionate. We've got to push
ourselves forward. We've got to be hard. We've got to be go getting." Isn't that
the way so many people think today? They probably look down on those sorts of
characteristics, sadly.
I hope not many of us were of that last line
of thinking. It's the way the world thinks. That's the way that God's enemies
think. That way of pushing myself forward, pushing myself forward is really the
very essence of sin. We have to remember whom Paul is writing to. Because he
begins by saying As God's chosen people. In other words these aren't very
natural characteristics. In fact Paul had to tell even his Christian
congregation, his Christian readers to clothe themselves with these qualities.
If we go one step further back, Paul is addressing them as God's chosen people. Christians are Christians because God
has chosen them. That's something that's not very clearly taught or understood
today. It's a myth that a person decides to become a Christian. Of course it's
true, we do have to make a decision. But it's not something that comes out of
our human nature. It's something we're stimulated to do in the first place by
the Spirit of God working upon us. It's something we do as God's chosen people.
That can banish any sort of pride, any sense of superiority. If we are
Christian, it is only because God's Holy Spirit has brought out spirit to life.
Then as Christian people we have to 'clothe ourselves'; clothe
ourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, goodness and patience. These are
qualities we have to 'put on'. like we put a suit of clothing on, or something
that we wrap around ourselves. Not as a sort of exterior veneer, but qualities
that we put on so that they may grow to become part of what we really are. And
qualities which can only grow thus because the Spirit of God is within us. If we
compare that list with the one Paul makes in Galatians as the fruit of the
Spirit: love, joy, peace. patience, kindness, goodness,
faithfulness, gentleness and self-control we see the same sort of
character don't we because it's the character of Jesus Christ himself.
If we go back to verse 10 we would have read that Paul tells his readers at
Colossae to put on the new self which is being renewed in
the knowledge and image of its creator. Christians are being made anew in
the mage of their Creator. We all are made in the image of God; that image is
marred by sin, ruined by sin. But as we come to Christ, as we become Christian
then that image is renewed and restored in us. The Holy Spirit endues us with
these qualities, which se still have to actively put on. Being a Christian,
living a Christian life is not something which occurs spontaneously or
automatically. It doesn’t just happen. We don't just sit back and do nothing
about it. Rather, we do have to actively strive to be compassionate, kind and so
on.
And the other things which Paul mentions too:
Bear with each other, he says, forgive each
other, and what greater motive is there to forgive each other that Jesus
Christ himself has forgiven us. Because he has forgiven us so much. How can we
refuse to forgive our brother or sister their small and trivial offences? And
over all these virtues, says Paul, put on love which binds everything in perfect
unity.
The American commentator John Macarthur says this:
Love is
the beauty of the believer dispelling the ugly sins of the flesh that destroy
unity.
"Love is the beauty of the believer". And there should be something
of that beauty of Christ (the 'fragrance' of Christ as Paul puts it somewhere in
his letters) in every believer or else there is something seriously wrong.
One of the best-known and best-loved passages of the Bible Paul says
that without love then anything we do, anything we are is worth nothing. Paul
says he could have all knowledge, that he could prophesy, he could move
mountains, he could give his body to the flames, but without love that entire
impressive list is valueless.
And it is love which binds everything
in perfect unity. This means that we can see the measure of how much the love of
Christ dwells within a Christian congregation, within a Christian fellowship by
the degree of unity. Is a Christian congregation or fellowship divided within
itself? Then there is very little of the love of Christ in its members hearts.
Sadly the history of the Christian church we see so much of that lack of unity;
a lack of the love of Christ. And Paul is saying over all these virtues put on
love "Put it on". Yes, it's the fruit of the Holy Spirit within us but still our
human flesh wants to go the other way, and wants to seek self. Constantly we
have to remind ourselves that we are Christians and strive to be like our Lord.
Jesus Christ, for then the Holy Spirit will in deed make us like him.
So far we have had the Christian character, the character of Christ which we
are exhorted to put on, clothe ourselves with described and now we are given
next the foundations upon which that character building, that "putting on" must
rest.
We are first to let the peace of Christ rule in (our) hearts
Second we let the word of Christ dwell in (us) richly and
Thirdly we whatever (we) do...do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus.
So
let's look at each of these three things in turn.
First of all the peace of Christ
Now peace, in the scriptural sense isn't
just absence of conflict. It’s something much more positive, much more dynamic.
It's not, as I once heard it put, relaxing in Grandma's rocking chair. There's a
dynamic in the peace of Christ and it depends on the fact that the peace of
Christ is really like a peace-treaty. When he died on the Cross, Jesus- if you
will, made a peace-treaty between God and us. Paul says in another of his
letters God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself
(2 Cor 5:19) By our sinful natures we were in fact God's enemies. Christ
made the peace treaty and that peace which Christ brings it to be the guiding
fact which rules in the sense of being the decision-maker, the decisive factor
in what we do and don't do; of what's right and what's wrong.
Is what
we do in accordance with that peace which Christ bought on the Cross, or is it
something against that; something which actually puts us back at enmity and at
loggerheads with God? If it is, then it's something we are to studiously avoid.
We are to let the peace of Christ rule in our hearts. For, says Paul, we were
called to peace. We were called, when God called us, to live at peace with him.
That peace, I repeat, is not just the absence of conflict. The peace of Christ
in our hearts produces a whole new dynamic, a whole new way of living, a way of
living at harmony with God: with God, for God, with God in Christ working
through us. That is of the essence of being a Christian.
Second the word of Christ should dwell in us richly
Of course the 'word
of Christ' really means the Scriptures. All the Scriptures are the word of
Christ. Christ is described at the beginning of John's Gospel as 'the Word'
In the beginning was the Word and the was with God and the
Word was God. Jesus Christ is the incarnate word of God and the word is
contained for us also in the Holy Scriptures.
Today is 'Bible Sunday'
and we remember the special place, which the Bible holds, or should hold in the
Christian life. Sadly for so many today it doesn't. Many Christians today
just seem to want to question the Bible, to see whether it sits alongside the
modern world-view, modern ways of thinking. Other people add in other scriptures
from other religions. Our Prime Minister claims to be a Christian and takes the
Koran with him wherever he goes. Maybe many would make a conglomerate of
the whole. For the true Christian, there's only one guiding principle. and it's
not in the writings of other faiths. It's in the Bible. God's word to us. How
can we know anything of the infinite, sovereign Lord other than what he chose to
reveal to us?
Yes, he showed himself in time and space for a period
of 30 years; he revealed himself in the person of the Lord Jesus Christ. For all
men, for all time he reveals himself in the book.
Now, of course, our
belief isn't in a book. Our belief is in the Person who is revealed in the book,
the person of the Lord Jesus Christ. This book is his word. Paul says let it
dwell in you richly. That means the Bible should find its home in us. And
richly, abundantly. So many Christians today do not read their Bible. There's
only a small minority of Christians who read their Bible daily. What a sad
commentary that is on 21st century Christianity! Small wonder that the
Christian churches cut so little ice, when it seems to hold the Word of God in
such contempt! Here again I say Paul tells us to let the word of Christ dwell in
you richly so that you can teach and admonish each other.
Teach with wisdom that word gives.
Thirdly, whatever we do, do it in the name of the Lord Jesus
The Name of
Jesus is a powerful name. There is no other name above his. It has power; power
to cast out demons, power to present our prayers before the throne of heaven.
And we are to do all in His Name. And in the biblical sense, the name of a
person is not just a tag for recognition, but that which defines his very
character. So we ought to do everything in accordance with the character of the
Lord Jesus Christ.
The peace of Christ, the word of Christ, the name of the Lord Jesus. These are the foundation stones upon which we shall be able to put on our Christian clothing. Without these foundations we shall not be able even to begin the task.
Finally there's one little phrase in each of these three verses 15 to 17.
At the end of verse 15: and be thankful
At
the end of verse 16: with gratitude in your hearts
At the end of verse 17: giving thanks to God the Father
through him
When as Christian people, we think of what the Lord Jesus
Christ did for us, when we think of the sacrifice of himself he made upon the
Cross, when we think of the fact that he has called us to be his own, when we
think of his life he offers us, the peace he gives us, of the gift of his Holy
Spirit, should we not be thankful? Should not thankfulness be at the core of our
lives?
And if thankfulness is at the core of our lives, will we not
strive to clothe (ourselves) with compassion, kindness, humility, goodness and
patience?
bearing with each other, forgiving each other and putting on love
as the primary virtue? All these things we shall strive to do, want to do as we
are thankful. Let us take time daily to think of what the Lord Jesus Christ has
done for us. Let us thank him daily for our salvation and then maybe we shall
just want one thing above all else: to become more and more like him.