Walking
in Christ. Colossians 2:6-7
Paul has heard that there were
problems that these believers were facing as they were attempting to live their
Christian lives in the midst of an extremely pagan culture. There’s not a whole
lot of difference between the culture of Asia Minor in 58-60 AD and our
culture. It was an eclectic culture, a culture that had a number of different
philosophies that influenced the way people thought and it was a culture that
had a number of different religions that were accepted as all being of equal
value. Whether a person believed one thing or another didn’t really matter as
long as it meant something to them and as long as it seemed to give their life
some level of meaning and definition. But then, as now, when the gospel of
Jesus was proclaimed in that culture it was a gospel of exclusivity—that
there is only one way to God, one way to salvation. And that message has always
rubbed mankind the wrong way because at the core of the sin nature is an
orientation to rebellion, an orientation to self as the ultimate and final
authority in life. Man wants to set the parameters, the goals, the rules, and
if he thinks he has done well enough to please God then God ought to at least
be gentlemanly enough to accept it. So whether one follows this religion or
that religion people believed that that ought to be sufficient. But when a
Christian come along and says no, it really does matter, we are all sinners,
nothing we do is acceptable to God, the only thing that has value is the death
of Jesus Christ and He alone is the path to salvation, then people get
irritated.
In our culture over the last couple
of hundred years that has seen the dominance of Christianity those who opposed
Christianity did not say a whole lot because they were in the minority, even an
extreme minority. But as our culture has moved into this post-Christian era
since at least 1963 the majority of people in this country reject biblical
Christianity. Today we live in a culture where Christianity is coming under
assault more and more.
So when we get to this epistle to
the Colossians there are a lot of things that we can learn with reference to
the Christian life, thinking as a Christian in the midst of a pagan culture
that is opposed to what we are saying, what we are teaching. As similar as
Ephesians and Colossians are they are different. If they were just synonymous
there would be no reason to include both in the New Testament. They are
different because the epistle that Paul writes to the Ephesians is tailored to
the problems that the Ephesians believers are facing, which is not quite the
same problem that the believers in Colosse are
facing. So the differences is what is instructive.
Part of this difference is that the significance and the sufficiency of Jesus
Christ is being specifically challenged in the Colosse environment. The believers who are living there are
suffering from assaults from philosophical and religious systems that say,
that’s all great what you believe about Jesus but you need to add some things
to that; if you are really going to have meaning and happiness in this life
then you need to have some external religious trappings—observe some holy
days, abstain from certain things as a sign that you have a closer relationship
with God; you need to assimilate certain ideas that we have learned from
philosophy that appeal to the intellectual capacity of man so that he thinks he
has something special because it is so erudite, so sophisticated.
These were the ideas that were
influencing that church, and frankly the assaults on Christianity have been
pretty much the same for the last 2000 years. There are always groups that come
along that think that they have a new twist on the Scripture. Now there are
some refinements and some areas of Scripture and of doctrine that have gained a
greater focus over the last 2000 years and been defined more precisely, but
frankly there is very little after 2000 years of study of the Word that is said
that someone else has not already said. As Solomon said in Ecclesiastes, there
is nothing new under the sun, and no one is going to come along today and say
they have “the secret to the Christian life.” It all boils down basically to
whether we really trust in Jesus Christ as the second person of the Trinity,
the eternal God in bodily form, and that He and He alone is sufficient for our
salvation, and His thinking—the Word of God, called the mind of Christ in
1 Corinthians 2:16—is sufficient for us in every area of life. That is
the issue. The challenge in Colosse was, it is great
what we have but we need some other things to kind of refine it and flush it
out a little bit. In other words, you don’t have everything, you just have
something good. This is a direct challenge to the sufficiency of Christ and to
all that He has done.
As we come to Colossians 2:6 we enter into the main
body, the main of the epistle. In this next section, which extends down to the
closing paragraphs, there are thirty imperatives. An imperative mood is a mood
of command, a mandate. It either states something positively that we should do
in the Christian life, or it presents something negatively that we should not
be doing in the Christian life. In Colossians 2:6 we find our first mandate.
Note verses 4-8 NASB “I say this so that no one will
delude you with persuasive argument. For even though I am absent in
body, nevertheless I am with you in spirit, rejoicing to see your good
discipline and the stability of your faith in Christ. Therefore as you have
received Christ Jesus the Lord, {so} walk in Him, having been firmly rooted
{and now} being built up in Him and established in your faith, just as you were
instructed, {and} overflowing with gratitude. See to it that no one takes you
captive through philosophy and empty deception, according to the tradition of
men, according to the elementary principles of the world, rather than according
to Christ.”
There
is a warning here that flows through the rest of the epistle to straightening
up our thinking so that we are protected and have a defensiveness through the
way we think so that false ideas can’t come in and distract us. This sets up
our orientation and it is verses 6 and seven that really become the hinge
verses for getting into the main body of this epistle.
In the next couple of verses we have
our fist two imperative mood verbs or commands. We are told to walk in Him in
v. 6, and in v. 8 we are told to watch out for or see to it that no one
deceives you through philosophy and empty deceit. What is interesting
structurally is that there is not another imperative until verse 16. So this
section from v. 6 down through 15 is the centerpiece of this epistle, and the
centerpiece of the centerpiece is verses 6 and 7. This is the core message of
this epistle: walk in Christ, v.6 and then v.7 defines how that walk takes
place.
Colossians 2:6 NASB
“Therefore as you have received Christ Jesus the Lord, {so} walk in Him.”
There are two basic questions in this verse that relate to what is said. The
first clause which is a comparative, “as you have received Christ”; and then,
“so walk in Him.” First of all, how did we receive Christ? If we are to walk
now as we received Him, how did we receive Him? Secondly, how exactly do we
walk in Him?
How do we walk in Christ? The
command here is from the verb peripateo,
present active imperative. That is important because in Greek a present
imperative is the way you are going to express a command that emphasizes
something that goes on throughout a long period of time. Present imperatives
are used to stress something that should be a standard operating procedure in
the life of a believer, something that should always characterize a Christian’s
life. It is a second person plural because it is addressed to the entire
congregation. “It is “You all walk,” but because it is not going to be
fulfilled corporately he is addressing a congregation but it is addressed to
each individual within the corporate body of the congregation in Colosse. In Colossians Paul uses this verb four different
times. What sets this one apart is that it is defined as “walk in Him.”
This is a really interesting phrase
and something of an exegetical problem because normally for the apostle Paul,
whenever he talks about “in Christ” or “in Him” he is talking about what we
refer to as positional truth or what every Christian has in terms of their
position in Christ. The instant we are saved we are identified with Christ in
His death, burial and resurrection by what is called the baptism by means of the
Holy Spirit. Christ uses the Holy Spirit to identify us with who He is and to
cleanse us positionally of all sin and to bring us into the body of Christ. Sp
Paul uses this phrase “in Christ” as a technical term and almost every time he
uses it he always means that.
But the other side of the problem
here is that this is a verb “to walk” which is not a verb that is usually used
in relation to our position in Christ but is a command that is usually related
to our day-to-day experience of our spiritual life. And the verb peritpateo is used with a variety of
prepositions—en pneumati, “walk
by means of the Holy Spirit.” There it is stressing how we are to walk. We are
to walk by faith and not by sight, but there it is not the preposition en, it is
dia plus the genitive which
expresses a very similar idea to the preposition en—“walk by faith.” It is an instrumental idea. We are
also to walk “according to the truth,” to “walk according to newness of life.”
All of these prepositions have different nuances, and en can express both means and state and is used in both
contexts. So it is a little bit ambiguous as to what this means specifically.
In our verse here this is an unusual type of construction for Paul and because
he uses it, it probably should grab our attention, because he is stating this
is a little bit of a different way to catch and capture out attention.
We are in Christ but we have to walk
as though we were in Christ. This is the only place where we have this idea in
Scripture. In Ephesians chapter five Paul says we are children of light. That
is positional truth; who we are in Christ: children of light. But then he says
“walk as children of light.” There is a correlation, an overlap between
positional truth and experiential truth. Because we are children of light,
because we are in Christ, we are to walk consistent with that reality. So this
explains what Paul is focusing on here in order that we understand it.
Colossians 1:10
relates to Paul’s prayer. The end game is our Christian way of life, the way in
which we live. The word peripateo
is used literally in the sense of just walking, but it is used figuratively to
refer to the way a person lives, the manner of life, how you live, the behavior patterns. So whenever we read this in the
epistles especially it usually does not refer to the physical act of walking
but to how we are to conduct ourselves, the manner of life we should have, the
characteristics of our day-to-day life. So Paul says in 1:10
that the goal of learning the Word and assimilating Bible doctrine into our
souls is so that we can walk in a manner that is worthy of God. It doesn’t mean
that we are trying to gain God’s grace. It reflects the fact that now that we
have received God’s grace, as we come to understand it in gratitude all that
God has done for us, that should motivate us to live in a manner that shows our
gratefulness to God for what He has done, for all that He has given us. We are
to walk in a manner that does not dishonor who we are but honors what God has
done for us. And that verse goes on to say that we are to walk worthy of the
Lord, fully pleasing Him by being fruitful in every good work. So the worthy
walk isn’t based on some sort of subjective standard that we are just going to
live as a good person, but that worthy walk is defined by being fruitful in
every good work. There is production that comes in the life of the believer.
A lot of people get into discussions
about what it means to be fruitful. Anyone who knows anything about agriculture
should know that being fruitful is not something that happens right away. There
are passages where Paul talks about the fruit of his ministry being people who
become saved, but the vast majority of passages that talk about the fruit of
the Christian life focus on character transformation, an inward transformation
that then leads to external changes. The focus on fruitfulness is not on
quantifiable, observable results. That upsets those in the lordship crowd who
want to say that you determine whether you are truly saved by the fruit in your
life. Well God didn’t call us to be fruit inspectors. We can’t look at someone
else’s life and because there are certain overt sins that take place there we
can conclude anything about their soteriological
status. We walk worthy by being fruitful in every good work and also by
increasing in the knowledge of God.
Colossians 3:7 shows that walking is
often stated in terms of a contrast. We are not to walk, as Paul says in Romans
8, according to the world or according to the flesh but we are to walk (Romans
6) according to newness of life and (Romans 8) according to the Spirit. So
there is a contrast. We don’t walk like the world walks, we don’t walk like
unbelievers, we don’t have a life that is similar to that of unbelievers; we
have a life that is different and is visibly and observably different.
Colossians 3:6, 7 NASB “For it is because of these things that the
wrath of God will come upon the sons of disobedience, and in them you also once
walked, when you were living in them.” But now we live differently as
believers.
The last use of peripateo is in Colossians 4:5 NASB
“Conduct yourselves with wisdom toward outsiders, making the most of the
opportunity.” Outsiders are unbelievers, and the manner of life that we have
when we are around unbelievers we are to let the wisdom of God’s life
characterize our life. And there should be a sense of why we are involved with
others who are unbelievers and how we are using that time in terms of being a
witness for Him. So there are four times in Colossians that this concept of
walking is mentioned. But it is mentioned many other times in Scripture.
2 Corinthians 5:7 NASB
“for we walk by faith, not by sight—” In other words, the Christian life
is based on faith. Everything from salvation to the time we die is based on
faith. But that doesn’t mean that we just fold our hands and sit in a corner
and say, “I am just going to have faith.” Faith is a means by which we
understand the commands and prohibitions of Scripture and we do what Scripture
says to do. Faith is not opposed to doing things. When we have a command in
Scripture to pray without ceasing we do that by means of faith. When we have
commands in Scripture that we are not to lie or we are not to associate with
certain rebellious believers, then we trust God and we do or we don’t do what
that command says to do.
Ephesians 5:2 NASB “and
walk in love, just as Christ also loved you and gave Himself up for us, an
offering and a sacrifice to God as a fragrant aroma.” Walk by means of love.
Love is used here as a way that enables us to relate to other people.
Ephesians 5:8 NASB “for
you were formerly darkness, but now you are Light in the Lord; walk as children
of Light.”
1 John 2:6 NASB “the one
who says he abides in Him ought himself to walk in the same manner as He
walked.” So if we claim to be in fellowship then we should live our life as a
reflection of Christ’s life. Our character should reflect His character. We
can’t manufacture that it can only come as a fruit of the Spirit.
Ephesians 2:10
NASB “For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good
works, which God prepared beforehand so that we would walk in them.”
Ephesians 4:1 NASB
“Therefore I, the prisoner of the Lord, implore you to walk in a manner worthy
of the calling with which you have been called.” We are to walk in a manner
consistent with what God has done for us and honor Him.
Ephesians 4:17 NASB “So
this I say, and affirm together with the Lord, that you walk no longer just as
the Gentiles also walk, in the futility of their mind.”
What all this means is that when we
live our lives as believers it is on the basis of faith. We are trusting in
something; that is what faith is. We are trusting in the Word of God. Faith
focuses on a sense of certainty and assuredness, something that is true. There
are degrees of faith, Scripture says. We can have faith like a mustard seed, a
seed which is extremely small. So it doesn’t take a lot of faith, just a little
faith, just to trust God.
Though we live our lives by
faith that is further defined by the positive commands and negative
prohibitions of the Scriptures. Positively that lifestyle that we
have as believers should be characterized by truth, by love as the Bible
defines it, by forgiveness, by righteousness, by biblical wisdom, by being
worthy of God’s grace. Negatively these passages all teach that we are to walk
not in lust or strife, drunkenness, envy, self-centeredness, craftiness
[deceptive, manipulative self-service], foolishness, being disorderly,
laziness. 3 John 4 NASB “I have no greater joy than this, to hear of
my children walking in [by means of] the truth.” John 17:17
NASB “Sanctify them in the truth; Your word
is truth.”
How do we walk in truth? By learning
God’s Word, but it is not an end in itself. The end is to transform the way we
think so that it transforms the way we live, so that God the Holy Spirit
produces within us from the Word of God the character of Christ and God is glorified.