Source: https://www.churchexiters.com/category/misc-bible-and-church-related/
Timestamp: 2019-04-22 02:13:43+00:00

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Topic 1 Which Book Came First—Timothy or Romans?
The issue of what women can or cannot do in the church continues to rage on. Christians for Biblical Equality have two good magazines to offer: one is Priscilla Papers and the other one is Mutuality. They have some excellent articles, a scholarly approach, and information to help the reader work through the challenges that seem to be ever present with ‘the woman issue’ in the church today.
The following are selected excerpts from two articles.
by Cynthia Long Westfall, Ph.D.
by John Jefferson Davis, Ph.D.
Which Book Came First—Timothy or Romans?
What is 1 Tim 2:8-15 really about? This is the primary passage that has been used to exclude women from teaching and leadership in the church. However, a careful examination of the passage in its context shows that it is most likely addressing false teaching and myths about marriage and childbirth that were spreading from house to house.
In an article, authored by Cynthia Long Westfall, we pick up some intriguing facts. Westfall begins her discussion by acknowledging that the 1 Corinthians passage on spiritual gifts reflects the Holy Spirit’s primary role in the distribution of the gifts. The problem in the evangelical church is that it has had a dominant hermeneutical approach which inserts 1 Tim. 2:12 as an a priori assumption over the distribution of the gifts of the Holy Spirit.
The result is that “women find that they hit unanticipated glass walls because they are dealing with embedded theologies that are far more restrictive and confusing than what is actually articulated or permitted.” Westfall states clearly that in practice a veil is placed over Rom. 12:1-8 when a woman reads it. The point is that anyone who studies Scripture, whether woman or man, needs to apply sound hermeneutical principles consistently when studying this passage.
Three of Paul’s epistles act as a template for the believer’s function in the church: 1 Corinthians, Romans, and Ephesians. These letters were written around A.D. 55-60. The Epistle to the Romans is the least occasional of Paul’s epistles and is the most systematic, with the most explanation and clarity. Paul never visited the Christians in Rome.
Romans was written to a group in a place that Paul never visited.
1 Timothy was a private, intimate letter to a member of his ministry team, which by nature assumes a very high level of shared information. Key information for outsider interpretation is omitted because the recipient understands the context.
1 Timothy is highly occasional, embedded in a particular context in Ephesus. Paul was addressing a number of specific issues and problems caused by false teaching.
1 Timothy was written as much as eight years after Romans was written.
The alleged interpretive grid in 1 Tim. 2:12 contains a number of significant interpretive problems.
When the eight-year span between these two letters is considered, the use of 1 Tim. 2:12 as an interpretive grid for Romans is anachronistic.
Not basing a doctrine on one verse.
Not basing a doctrine on a verse or passage with interpretive problems.
Giving preference to the clearer passage.
Rom. 12:1-8 is a unified thread and 12:9-21 is closely related.
Parallel passages in 1 Cor. 12 and Eph. 4:11-15 elucidate Paul’s theology of spiritual gifts and can be used legitimately to interpret each other.
Regardless of one’s translation theory, in the Greek, humas (you plural) and adelphoi (siblings/brothers and sisters) refer to both women and men. This is made explicit and emphatic in 12:3—these instructions are addressed to every single one of the believers.
Since Christ offered himself as the once-for-all sacrifice for sin, then all believers stand on the same ground before God. Each believer now has the right, the authority, to follow Christ into the Holy of Holies functioning as priests.
Every believer can share knowledge even though every believer may not have the gift of teaching.
All functions in ministry flow out of the concept of the priesthood of the believer.
In the book, How to Think Theologically, there is a helpful distinction between deliberative theology and embedded theology.
Deliberative theology is intentionally drawn from interpreting the Bible. Scriptures are studied and developed into a coherent worldview.
Women are told that utilizing emotion and experience is invalid in discovering their call–if they come up with the “wrong” conclusion. This is ironic, because women follow the same procedures received directly from the unified witness, teaching, and example of men in the pulpit, adult Sunday schools, Bible classes, theologians, and writers of commentaries.
As a result, in practice, a man’s experience and emotions are treated as normative regarding his call to ministry, but a woman’s emotions and experience are treated as suspect. Her findings can be cancelled out by being outside of wherever “they” draw the line of what the appropriate sphere of ministry is for women. Westfall further notes that, historically, the line has been drawn in every conceivable place.
Westfall zeroes in on the fact that there is a “hermeneutic of suspicion” that is pervasive among conservative evangelicals which has been used to interpret and judge a woman’s identity as well as her behavior.
Westfall defines the problem as using 1 Tim. 2:12 as a hermeneutical grid when interpreting Rom. 12:1-8. She affirms that the Roman church “could not have used it as an interpretive grid.” Using one verse, which has interpretive problems, is unwise. Preference should be given to the clearer passage in Romans over the less clear passage in 1 Timothy.
From Priscilla Papers, Volume 24, Number 3, Summer, 2010.
Davis concludes that this also may be the case with regard to traditional understandings of the biblical texts regarding the ordination of women.
This line of argument overlooks the fact that the nature of priesthood was fundamentally changed in the transition from the old to the New Covenant. In the New Testament church, all believers are priests, offering the sacrifices of praise and thanksgiving to God.
The idea of the male priest as “icon of Christ” argument demonstrates a misunderstanding of the purpose of the incarnation.
Though Jesus became incarnate, as a male, the main point is that God took on a full and complete human nature. This human nature fully represented both male and female.
The outstanding point with the incarnation was that Jesus was not only a male by gender, but more specifically, he was a Jewish, unmarried, physically unblemished, male.
When one reads the fine print in Lev. 21:17-21, it is also clear that in order to be ordained to the Levitical priesthood that the candidate could not be: blind, lame, deformed, crippled, or have any eye defects.
Since both male and female are made in the image of God, according to the account in Genesis 1:17, both genders reflect the character of God.
It does not follow that Jews can be closer to God than Gentiles or that Jews are better “icons” of God than Gentiles.
Nor does it follow that males are inherently better “icons” of God than women.
The good news has always been that in the New Covenant these distinctions are overcome, according to Gal. 3:28: “neither Jew nor Gentile, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus”—all have equal access to God and to God’s grace.
The male language of the Trinity is a circumstantial (though not arbitrary) and not an essential characteristic of the Trinitarian revelation of Scripture.
How does human language describe some aspects of God?
God is a spirit by nature and so is not literally a gendered being.
The word “Father” is predicated on a human father. Though God is like a human father in some respects, he is not just like or only like a human father, but infinitely greater than any human father.
God is also described in Scripture in terms that are impersonal such as: God is a Rock; a consuming fire; God is light, etc.
The fundamental core assertion of the Triune name of God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is the personal nature of God.
In a nutshell, Davis points out that since the Triune community is the basis of all human community then the use of “male” language of the Trinity is an analogical revelation of strength and power of God to create and redeem.
From Priscilla Papers, Volume 24, Number 1, Winter, 2010.
for their ongoing ministry and excellent material on these topics.
In order to access further articles on the topic of biblical gender equality, please contact Christians for Biblical Equality.
Request information for: Priscilla Papers or Mutuality.
Request CBE’s informative online newsletter called Arise.
11 A woman[a] should learn in quietness and full submission.
12 I do not permit a woman to teach or to assume authority over a man;[b] she must be quiet.
15 But women[c] will be saved through childbearing—if they continue in faith, love and holiness with propriety.
Is keeping women silent in the church biblical?
The practice of keeping over half of the Body of Christ under a perceived ‘command’ that women need to refrain from ‘speaking in the church’ and, therefore, doing very much ministry in their churches, is essentially problematic.
This belief system needs to be examined in light of New Testament teachings to determine whether it is a valid belief and practice in the Church for today. This continuing persuasion remains a source of frustration for godly women who sense Christ’s call on their lives–to serve him by serving in the Church.
Are women who feel called by Christ to preach and teach, wrongly hearing Christ’s voice and so are potentially at risk of living in sin for doing so?
Unfortunately, some Christian groups would prefer that women “recognize their place.” These groups would affirm that the biblical teaching about women in the church is just plain ‘black and white,’ that it is quite obvious from the New Testament passages of Scripture, and that this is how godly women in each generation should continue to behave.
Tackling this perception and practice, among various Christian groups today, is not based solely on the fact that women appear to be having opportunities to use their giftings in the work place, in public service, or even that the culture is now open to women in various capacities. Since the time of the Apostle Paul, Christians have based their beliefs on the New Testament references regarding the place of women in the Church. This is where the problem lies—in how the passages about Christian women and their ministry in the local church have been interpreted.
With a cold reading and instant interpretation of a very few biblical passages, without further investigation, a belief system has been structured. The danger with this method of biblical interpretation is that it leaves many things imprecise and unexplained. It creates a cut and dried Christian faith conviction that is fraught with textual inconsistences.
Men and women must dig deeper when it comes to ingrained views about the role of women and men in the local church. It is necessary for Christians to examine this issue more fully in order to have answers for themselves and for others.
Stifling women’s voices in the church, based on faulty interpretations of the Bible, does a disservice to women and to the Body of Christ as a whole.
The following article is aimed to help you with your personal research of this important topic.
I [Barb] attended a stimulating conference that honored scholarship and wrestling with Scripture in order to understand passages and Christian practices in deeper and richer ways. I was privileged to attend a session and sit next to a professor who presented a paper on a familiar, yet perplexing passage about women remaining silent in the church. This passage is First Corinthians 14:34-35.
Dr. Waldemar Kowalski did a masterful job of peeling back the issues one by one and getting to the context and understanding of this passage. His paper included many footnotes from other authors as well as references regarding the Greek language.
I will not include all of Waldemar’s many references in this article but will cover the central points. If people have an interest in checking out the cited works and Greek references, this paper could be made available to them.
I have Dr. Waldemar Kowalski’s permission to share the ideas from his paper in a reader-friendly format for my website. I am delighted to share Waldemar’s insights regarding this passage.
The reader is reminded that the context of this passage is the mixed worship among the Corinthian believers and that the instructions are given equally to men and women. This eliminates the idea of single-gender worship, which would make no sense.
Some treat these verses as a non-Pauline interpolation, most likely those who are antagonistic to female ministry or to women in general.
Some choose to remove the verses, relegating them as architectural artefacts (segregated worship spaces).
Some see these verses as an intrusion of pagan practices in Christian worship.
Some scholars treat this passage as a problem to be removed.
Therefore, one must ask: Do these approaches have merit?
While disruptive pagan cultic practices and questions shouted out from a segregated seating area may have occurred as disorderly intrusions in Corinthian worship, the text does not indicate this and this suggestion does not have traction in current scholarship.
That contemporary culture differs from that of Paul’s Corinth is clear, but discarding the Pauline instruction on that basis is dangerous. There is nothing in the text to indicate that this was localized either geographically or temporally.
The stress on “all the churches” (v. 33) and the broader Christian community (vv. 36-38) argues to the contrary.
The idea that the Corinthian worshipers themselves were trying to curtail female involvement in worship and that Paul is countering them is dubious: this chapter is about curbing rather than encouraging disorder.
Since the bulk of First Corinthians is a response by Paul to a letter received from this church, the modern reader only has one half of the telephone conversation. This is one of the reasons for the readers’ confusion when reading this epistle. An issue can be determined along with Paul’s prescription, but there is minimum data from which to construct the causative problem.
Dr. Kowalski suggests three observations as an aid in dealing with difficult texts, and this passage in particular.
“The text does not care about the reader’s preference. We are not permitted to make it jump through hoops like a trained poodle simply because we do not like what it says. It is the Word of God, not of some theologian or scholar. We dismiss the text as not applicable to our situation at personal peril.
We can expect the text to have coherence and make sense. The whole is God’s Word, and we can expect it to be consistent. In the case of 1 Corinthians, it takes only a few minutes to read from chapter 11, where instructions can be found as to how women are to pray and prophesy, to chapter 14, where instructions can be found which seem to forbid any speaking by women in the church.
The writer expected the audience to make sense of this, so these passages must not be in conflict. We can expect God not to be confused about his message. We can expect a certain unity and agreement of message within Scripture, as God/the Holy Spirit is the overall author.
There are divine secrets (Deut. 29:29) as well as divine ambiguities (such as the tension between divine sovereignty and human responsibility), but we can expect Scripture to communicate and to make sense.
We need to understand something about the original audience (and particularly its culture) to understand what is going on and what the original hearers understood and were meant to understand.
For instance, 1 Cor. 11, with its instructions on hair, has to do with specific issues in Corinth. I recommend Bruce Winter’s book: Roman Wives, Roman Widows.
While other portions of Scripture likewise offer challenges of understanding, instructions on behavior, as found in these two texts, were intended to change behavior–not to confuse the audience. We need to understand what the original audience understood, in order to understand what it means in our situation today.
In order to solve an interpretive puzzle, the reader is required to go back in an attempt to reconstruct the original situation.
including instructions in vv. 34-35.
When it comes to checking out most English translations of this text, several issues come up.
The NIV splits v. 33 in the middle, making the universal rule: silence for the women.
The NASB, KJV, and others see the verse as a unit, making the universal rule that God is a God of peace rather than confusion (which is the topic of the whole chapter).
It makes more sense that peace is the universal rule, observed in all the churches.
The repetition of the Greek word in vv. 33 and 34 is very awkward.
Another reason relates to the interpolation theories and textual variants. In some of the Greek manuscripts, vv. 34 and 35 appear at the end of the chapter rather than after v. 33 (one of the reasons why some scholars consider the text added later by a scribe). The newer edition of the NIV (2011) rectified this and renders v. 33 as one logical unit.
The first correction to the English text is that v. 33 proclaims that God is a God of peace and not disorder and that this is to prevail in all congregations, including in Corinth.
The second correction to the text of the NIV has to do with Paul’s command itself.
It is noteworthy that three groups are told to be silent under specific circumstance, employing a single Greek verb for all three with identical inflection, varying only in that the third group is plural and the first two employ the singular form.
Let us look more closely at these three groups.
Prophets are limited to two or three messages then are to be silent while the others judge.
*Gordon D. Fee. The First Epistle to the Corinthians, The New International Commentary on the New Testament (Grand Rapids, MI: W.B. Eerdmans Publ. Co., 1987), 693.
If a prophecy (or possibly this could mean the judging/ discerning of a prophecy) is given to someone seated, the one currently giving the prophecy is to be silent.
The contextual suggestion is that a prophecy had been given but that it had been judged and was found to be lacking.
The third group are “the women” of 1 Cor. 14:34-35, who likewise are to be silent. Note that Paul is using the same Greek term.
Kowalski confirms that the change in translation brings about the logical separation of “the women” from the other charismatics being addressed in this section.
Therefore, if the reader is to make sense of this passage, it is imperative that the correlation of these three groups within these parallel instructions is factored in.
*J. David Miller, “Translating Paul’s Words About Women,” Stone-Campbell Journal 2009, vol. 12, issue 1 Spring (2009).
Another significant factor is in trying to ascertain the identity of the women purposefully referenced here.
While “women” can be an appropriate translation for the plural form, these particular women have husbands.These women are specifically wives in this context and are to interact with their own husbands.
The reader begins to see that all three of these groups are specifically commanded regarding silence rather than speech in a particular situation. We must remember that speech itself is not generally being forbidden.
The women were chattering or being disruptive because of a segregated worship facility.
The women were mimicking pagan female worship activity, which could be quite profane and disruptive.
Kowalski suggests that these are an incorrect assessment since the word used for speaking in v. 34 is used for edifying speech earlier in the chapter. Not only that, but this word is also noted that the parallel groups also speak, vv. 27 and 29. Furthermore, this does not resolve the issue of the apparent abrupt change of topic in this chapter on order in charismatic worship.
Why should this command be limited to the wives?
Why are they to ask their husbands in private?
For answers, we are guided to consider the use of the word: ask. It is curious to discover that in the 56 times this word is used in the NT, the context is one of interrogation, that is, close to a judicial context.
For other uses of this word, we see it used a number of times when Christ was being tested by the religious authorities and also during his trial. To paint a picture of its use in the Corinthian church by these women, Kowalski suggests that it was used in public as a judgment/ interrogation by a wife of her husband. Simply stated, this would be offensive and need to be limited.
Paul commanded judgment of prophecy.
Whether done by the entire church or only the prophets, the fact was that this was a normative practice, when the assembly gathered, this can be established.
While the number of delivered prophecies was being limited, there seems to be no such limitation on the succeeding judgments.
Hence, there is no limitation on the permission of women to judge prophecy–just not that of one’s spouse.
There is an obvious numeric limitation for the third group: each husband would have only one wife.
Although the English rendering seems to enjoin entire silence of “the women,” this is not actually the case, since there is prior identification of women as prophets. We see this in 1 Cor. 11:5.
Secondly, there is an instruction that prophets (or the entire congregation) were to judge prophecies.
Kowalski asks a few questions about various terms.
What about the statement that it is “disgraceful” for a woman/wife to speak in church (v. 35)?
What about the instruction that the wives are to be “in submission” (NIV) in v. 34?
What about the reference to the Law in v. 34?
The word used here for disgraceful is the same word as is used in 1 Cor. 11:6, where “it is a disgrace for a woman to have her hair cut or shaved off.” Both passages refer to things that are considered disgraceful or shameful in the culture of the time.
The context for 1 Cor. 11:6 is the speaking of women in the congregation, with disgrace being not in the act of speaking but in the inappropriate demeanor (an uncovered head). The disgrace of 1 Cor. 14:35 would also logically be related to inappropriate actions or demeanor (interrogating one’s husband in public) not the act of speaking in itself.
The repeated use of disgrace here in 14:34-35, echoing 11:5-6, reinforces that the activity in question has to do with charismatic worship, and specifically, prophecy.
Both the prophets and the wives are to be under control.
Prophets could control their use of their gift and likewise, the wives could control their speech.
Although the wives are instructed to “be subject” there is no specification of to whom they are subject or by whom they are subjected.
In 1 Corinthians, Paul refers to the law six times.
This use of “law” in v. 34 is not a reference to an identified prohibition in the Old Testament.
This use of “law” cannot be effectively argued as deriving from later rabbinic Judaism or Josephus.
This passage is not a change of topic.
This is not an intrusion.
The repetition of terms and parallel construction firmly embed vv. 34-35 as part of this charismatic instruction.
The topic is still the proper employing of spiritual gifts in building up the congregation.
Among the responsibilities of all the prophets was the need to judge or to weigh a prophecy being given, with no indication given that the female prophets were excused from this responsibility.
However, when it came to the issue of a wife judging her own husband’s prophecy, she was to abstain from doing so in the congregation, doing this at home instead.
The disruptive effect of such public action would be offensive in virtually any society!
The attempt of various church assemblies to keep women in submission and to keep them silent in church is clearly based on faulty interpretive methods of the New Testament text.
This defective persuasion contributes to the practice of women being under-utilized in the Body of Christ and undervalued as gifted children of God to the Church.
This flawed belief system deviously provides ‘biblical grounds’ for abuse of all kinds against women and girls–both in the church and in the home. This is where the issue of gender inequality takes us!
A clear interpretation of the New Testament points to the fact that in the Kingdom of God, the equal value of men and women is a valid biblical view regarding gender.
What people believe about the roles of males and females in society is vital. What Christians believe about the place of women and men in the church and in the home is crucial. What people believe directs how they will actually live.
Has there been a church tradition that has been firmly in place for far too long that needs to be re-examined and then set right?
The answer to this question remains with you.
Change Begins When Faulty Belief Systems Are Changed!
Seattle Pacific University, March, 2013.
With many Thanks to Dr. Kowalski for permission to use insights from this paper for this website article.
There are many books that are available for the serious researcher on this topic. There are also many online websites and blogs that offer resources and discussions around these topics.
Grenz, Stanley J. Women in the Church. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1995.
Cunningham, Loren, and David Joel Hamilton. Why Not Women? Seattle: YWAM Publishing, 2000.
Bilezikian, Gilbert. Community 101. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1997.
Tucker, Ruth A., and Walter Liefeld. Daughters of the Church. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1987.
Patricia Gundry’s book: Woman Be Free was named by Christianity Today as one of the most influential books for Evangelicals in the last 40 years.
Patricia Grundy’s book: Heirs Together: Applying the Biblical Principle of Mutual Submission in Your Marriage. This book was named by Eternity Magazine as one of the Top 25 books of the year.
The Barna Group. “Women Are the Backbone of the Christian Congregations in America.” March 6, 2000.
I don’t need to be told, to be preached at, that I am a sinner. I kinda figured that part out all by myself. What I really need to hear is who I really am. What I need to be told is that I am a child of the King, a daughter of the Creator of the Universe, that I belong among the people of God, that I have purpose and a destiny, that each day is special cuz God made it, that I can do something for God that will last forever, that I can and do please God, and that He and I are in this together—forever. That’s what I need to hear!
Those are the kinds of things that I need to be reminded of. Since I am also an inhabitant of planet earth, I often get busy and forget who I really am. I need to be reminded that I am part of the King’s family. That’s a laugh, you say. Well, let me tell you, right here in the Good Book there are lots of things that show me that this is true.
Oh yes, it tells people that they are sinners, just in case they don’t get it–but most people get it. What is neat is that the teaching from Heaven does not just camp only there. That would be like going camping and having it rain every day! Where’s the sunshine??!
The Scriptures really do remind me that I am a child of God, that I am part of a royal family, and that I can live up to my inherited destiny. As a child I was wowed with the knowledge that: there was a God, that he loved human beings, and that he sent his Son to die for the sins of mankind because that was the only way that there could be any change with this sin problem.
This Son, whose name was Jesus, and came as a baby at Christmastime was the one that died on a cross on Good Friday, but was resurrected from the dead on Easter Sunday. Wow, what a story–it just made sense to me as a young child.
Every now and then, as a child, I would do the “what if” thing. What if it wasn’t true? What if it can’t be proven? What if there really isn’t a God and I was silly to buy into a fable or a tradition? I tried hard to imagine what it would be like if the belief in God was not true; that God just did not exist.
After these short mental excursions, my whole conscious thought rejected that. I didn’t have to linger any longer in that thought area. It made logical sense that there was a Creator God and that all that I could see around me was part of his thoughtful creative action. I was sold, I was and still am a gone goose, that God is alive and well and that he was and is keenly interested in the world: the earth, the people, and all creation. That means that God, the Creator, the Designer of the Universe is interested in me. That he has my best interests at heart. How neat is that?!
I recently heard about a speaker from a large church in Canada coming to preach locally. Some of my pals said that they were going to hear him. I decided that would be good to go since this large church was close by and it would be easy to get to. In fact, I looked forward to hearing what this preacher might have to say.
After a well-executed effort by the worship team, the speaker was introduced and then he began his evening message. The preaching confirmed that everyone there was a sinner and made that point by Scripture, personal stories, and some funny comments by people he had met. It made for some icebreakers and everyone enjoyed the humor.
What was curious was that the crowd gathered was made up of a large number of seniors. They obviously knew about this preacher and made and effort to get out for this special meeting. Most of these Christians had a firm hold on the Gospel message. In fact, many of them probably had been following the Lord Jesus for decades—most of their lives.
That added to my conundrum–why these dear elderly saints needed to be reminded that they were sinners. They could have, instead, been reminded that they were God’s dear children and how they could continue to live effectively in the energy of the Spirit of Christ that Paul had talked about.
Though the passages the preacher read were clear and accurate and his personal examples backed up the idea that God’s people were sinners and that is the way it is, I began to think that there was much more that needed to be said much sooner in the message.
As I meditated later on the direction of this kind of preaching, I had to think that the speaker needed to get to the good stuff, the Kingdom principle stuff, way sooner in his talk. When I woke up the next day, the words to my first paragraph, above, began to take shape in my mind. That was the driver, the inspiration, behind these reflections in this article.
My experience of that kind of preaching got my mind thinking, that God’s people need to be reminded who they are so that they can continue to live and grow into their potential in Christ. I don’t think that I am alone in recognizing that most preachers try hard to communicate with words that are clear and biblical in order to help change people’s thinking. After all, it is what and how people think that determines how they live.
Over the years, as a follower of Jesus, I have gained an understanding of the basics of the Gospel. As a child, I heard that I was a sinner and that I needed a Savior. I believed what I heard and got the best Savior that I could find: Jesus Christ. Actually, he found me, but you know what I mean!!
Knowing that you are a sinner is one of the many things that come with understanding God’s plan of salvation for mankind. Knowing what sin is, how it is ingrained in the very fabric of our being, and how sin is worked out in our lives, so easily, is a given. What I really need to know more about, and be retold, is about my new nature, the one that God breathed into me, as he revealed the Good News to my heart.
The Scriptures confirm that no one can be a Christian without the Spirit of God revealing that fact to them. Christians are people who have responded to that revelation that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, that he was born and lived on the earth as a man, and that he took on himself the sins of all of mankind in order to provide a better way for people to live. Jesus provided a way so that I could have a relationship with the Loving Heavenly Father who longs to know me and be my God.
The new birth was an amazing spiritual transaction. It will take the rest of my life to begin to understand all that the Godhead has done for me through the cross-work and resurrection of Christ. This is what I need to be reminded of: how great God’s salvation is!
I need to be reminded that God has given me his Holy Presence which lives within me. His Holy Spirit in me is what gives me the knowledge and the confidence to be able to live above the natural down drag that we all are born into. I need to hang out with other people who have experienced and who seek to understand the magnitude of this new birth, this life like the Resurrected Christ.
What I read the Apostle Paul saying is that it is important for believers to reckon that they have died with Christ and that they are raised up to be with Christ. Now that is quite the thought. If Christ was raised from the dead by the Father and that he has ascended to be with the Father, then his place of authority now is: “seated at the right hand of the Father.” The New Testament writers confirm that the spiritual position of children of God is with Christ, in heaven, and seated with the Father. Now that is too marvellous to fathom.
What I can’t figure out is if I can find that so easily in the letters of Paul when I pick up my Bible to read it, why does it seem like these truths are so hidden from view among the people of God? Why isn’t this good news talked about over the pulpit so much more than it is, if in fact it really is true?! As I have said before, you are what you eat–then maybe something is missing in our spiritual diet. We need to get back to organic Bible and feed on that kind of grain.
I need to hear how to live the Christian life. I need to know that I have the power to do it and that I don’t have to depend on myself, but I have heaven’s resources available to me. I need to know that I have a Loving Father who will walk with me every step of the way. I need to know that I have a Brother who has gone to bat for me and has hit it out of the park!
I need to know that my destiny is greater than I can imagine and that God is keenly interested in my growing and understanding how truly amazing it all is.
What I need to hear is that I REALLY AM A CHILD OF THE KING and how I really can live that kind of a life! I really have experienced the kindness of God.
Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things. For you died, and your life is now hidden with Christ in God. When Christ, who is your life, appears, then you also will appear with him in glory. Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature . . .
how they were to live on the earth with that Kingdom understanding.
After you have read those passages a few times and have made some good notes, get together with some pals who you can share your insights with and see what they have to share with you from their understanding of those books.
in that love as we walk in your path of righteousness. Amen.
When I look at Paul’s Epistle to the Colossians I have to ask myself: What kind of a Gospel have I heard? As the decades roll out, each one of us has been in so many places where the Gospel has been preached, taught, sung, and lived.
There are many Scripture passages that give us a description of our new spiritual state. As Christians, we need to be reminded of who we are in Christ and the magnitude of what Christ has done to make this a done deal.
Unfortunately, many Christians have gotten such poor teaching on their spiritual inheritance that they still live in the poverty of their salvation, rather than in its riches.
Understanding the Christian Gospel includes a solid grasp of the grace of God in all its wonder. It is recognizing the Supremacy of Christ and it is living in the power of this Gospel in everyday life.
In the introduction to the letter to the Christians in Colosse, Paul reminds these Christians that the Gospel that they had heard had a couple of dynamic elements. They understood God’s grace in all its truth and that this Gospel was growing all over the world. Paul affirmed that Christ was fully adequate for their salvation.
We are informed that Paul’s fellow laborer, Epaphras, was the one who carried the Gospel message to those in Colosse. Epaphras is described as a colleague of Paul and the brothers with him. He was a dear fellow servant and faithful minister. He was sent to minister on their behalf to the church community in Colosse.
Paul and his co-laborers prayed earnestly for this community. Why? They prayed so that these saints would be: filled with God and with the knowledge of his will through all spiritual wisdom and understanding–in order that they might live a life ‘worthy’ of the Lord and please the Lord in every way.
Paul reminded them that just as they had received this good news by faith, they were to continue to live their lives ‘in Christ’ by faith (2:5, 6).
Paul admonished the Colossian believers to be aware that there was a potential that someone could take them captive. They were to be alert to what might be lurking. They needed to know how they could be taken captive. This could happen through hollow and deceptive philosophy which depended on human traditions and the basic principles of the world, rather than on Christ.
Paul brought a number of things to their immediate attention. What had the Colossians received in their Gospel package?
The fullness of deity lived in bodily form.
Christ was the Head over every power and authority.
2. That Christians were those who believed in this Christ.
3. Christians were circumcised in the putting off of the sinful nature.
This is ancient speak meaning that this ancient Jewish ritual was not done by human hands. No, it was done by Christ!
This was the kind of power that raised up this kind of Christ from the dead.
So here’s the thing, Paul was basically telling them: When you were spiritually dead in your sins and there was no spiritual circumcision in place, just lifelessness—God came to the rescue! God injected life into a spiritual corpse.
This action equalled: forgiveness of sins, yes, all of them!
The written code that was hanging over each of them was now cancelled. It was taken away. In fact, it was nailed to the cross!
Christ’s action disarmed the powers and authorities.
Christ made a public spectacle of them. Christ triumphed through his cross-work over all powers.
I am reminded of the song: “Beautiful Scandalous Night” that incorporates the songwriter’s amazement of this event. The refrain reminds the listener that it was a “beautiful scandalous night” that sins were atoned for. This event was all too amazing for words.
The heightened corporate benefit for the Christian men and women of Colosse was in grasping the magnitude of this spiritual transaction was that they, too, were victors, like Christ. Christians are those who have been born into God’s family and, therefore, are entitled to all of the benefits of this new status.
Paul exhorted these believers not to step away from their position in Christ and get entangled in the tactics that certain individuals could use to beguile them. Some were rigorously intent on bringing them back into the practices of Judaism in order to secure their merit before Yahweh. Paul exhorted them: Don’t get caught up in this waste of time!
The Body of Christ was held together by its design and was primed to grow as God had designed it. All this other falderal was just fruitless distraction and they were strongly urged to avoid it!
Though there seemed to be a promise in keeping the regulations, it was unfounded since these regulations lacked any value in “restraining sensual indulgence!” There was just no power in the keeping of them. There was just no strength to follow through. The real power was in the true Gospel.
Paul never tired of reminding believers in the early church that they had died with Christ. The work had already been done, so why sweat it!
The Apostle explained that since they had been raised with Christ that they were to set their hearts on things above, where every day, all day, Christ was and is seated at the right hand of God.
“Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things.
Their lives were both hidden and secure with Christ in God. Now that is pretty secure, if anyone asks me!
So back here on earth, while waiting for their appearing with Christ in glory, they were to take some meaningful spiritual action. They were to be vigilant, decisive, and methodical in making sure that they lived Kingdom principles.
1. Put to death whatever belonged to the earthly nature.
2. Put on new clothes.
They were to clothe themselves with: compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience.
“Bear with each other and forgive one another if any of you has a grievance against someone.
3. Allow the peace of Christ to rule in their hearts.
4. Let the message of Christ dwell richly among them. This would be manifested by good teachings and joyful songs.
The homes of Christians were to exemplify the work of Christ and the grace of God in their lives. The Greco-Roman Household Codes were a guideline in that society. Paul urged the Christians to live a much higher standard and gave specific instructions to help believers see how this could be worked out in their daily lives in practical and loving ways.
This was the same kind of Gospel that the Roman believers had heard. In the introduction to the Epistle to the Romans Paul outlined the kind of Gospel that they, too, had heard.
*Yahweh had promised beforehand through the prophets.
by his resurrection from the dead.
*Gentiles could be called to the obedience that comes from faith.
*People were loved by God, belonged to Jesus Christ, and were called to be saints.
*Paul was eager to preach to them about it.
*A righteousness from God had been revealed.
*A righteousness that was by faith, from first to last.
*Righteous followers would live this Gospel by faith.
*Paul was not ashamed of this kind of Gospel!
Hopefully, after all is said and done, those of us today can say that the kind of Gospel that we have heard is the authentic one, like the one that the Colossians had heard.
The kind of Gospel that they had heard was the one that gave people life with energy because it had been birthed from Heaven. The Heavenly Father, the Lord Jesus Christ, and the Precious Holy Spirit were involved in getting this Gospel from the heights of heaven down to earth where it would have the most benefit.
Paul wrote with joy and conviction as he penned the words to this early Christian community. He was excited for them to be fully grounded in all that came with their heavenly gift. He did not want them to waste any time in truly living and experiencing this gift of salvation to the fullest.
This is the kind of Gospel that I have heard and have believed.
What kind of a Gospel have you heard??

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