Exploring the Word of God: Reading Through Colossians and Philemon
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About this ebook
In this lay-level commentary, Michael Morrison explores the details of Paul's letter to the Colossians and to Philemon. In Colossians, Paul insists that Christ is fully sufficient for our salvation; we do not need to add any extra knowledge or rules to qualify for the kingdom. In his letter to Philemon, Paul asks Philemon to treat a slave as a brother, and to send him to help Paul.
Michael D. Morrison
I grew up in a small town in southern Illinois: Sparta. Our family of seven was religious but did not go to church - instead, we had a Bible study at home every week. I eventually began attending a church after I moved away, and then I went to a Bible college, and eventually a seminary. Now I work for Grace Communion Seminary, an online seminary based in Glendora, California. My interests are the Gospels, the epistles and theology of Paul, and ethics.
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Exploring the Word of God - Michael D. Morrison
Exploring the Word of God:
Reading Through Colossians and Philemon
By Michael D. Morrison
Copyright 2013 Grace Communion International
Cover art by Ken Tunell. Copyright Grace Communion International.
Scripture quotations from Colossians 2 and Philemon are taken from New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright 1989, Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations in the other chapters, unless noted, are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright ©1973, 1978, 1984 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com The NIV
and New International Version
are trademarks registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office by Biblica, Inc.™
Table of Contents
The Colossian Heresy
Already in the Kingdom: Colossians 1
Victory on the Cross: Colossians 2
Colossians 2:14 and the Handwriting of Requirements
New Clothes for New People: Colossians 3
Relationships in and out of the Church: Colossians 4
Philemon: A Slave as a Brother
About the author
About the publisher
Grace Communion Seminary
Ambassador College of Christian Ministry
Introduction: This project began in the mid 1990s. The first volume of Exploring the Word of God was published in 1995. We were not able to print any more volumes, but we continued to study and write articles about Scripture. We have gathered these articles and are publishing them as e-books. We hope you find these studies useful and encouraging.
Philemon is often included in commentaries about Colossians, partly because Philemon is usually considered too short to merit a commentary of its own, and it does not fit well with the Pastoral Epistles, which it follows in the canon. It does have similarities with Colossians, and Philemon apparently lived in or near Colossae.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The Colossian Heresy
Jewish legalism — dissident liberalism — or pagan superstition?
What was the problem that shook God’s church at Colossae?
While Paul was in prison, probably in Rome,¹ heresy entered the church at Colossae, in Asia Minor. The news was brought to Paul by his close friend and co-worker, Epaphras (Colossians 1:8), who was a minister at Colossae (1:7; 4:12).
Scholars disagree in the way they understand the problem at Colossae and in the way they interpret Paul’s admonitions. Did Paul intend to stop the advance of some philosophical sect? Was it to warn Judaizers who were arguing for circumcision? Was Paul informing the Colossians of their freedom from ordinances or from the ceremonial laws of Moses?
Paul’s purpose — the main point of the letter — is disputed, and it will be analyzed below.
The source of modern confusion
The problem at Colossae is clouded by an assumption that pervades commentaries and other exegetical works: that Paul’s warning to the Colossians to beware of hollow and deceptive philosophy
(2:8) indicates that a Greek or local philosophical sect was invading the Christian congregation to entice members away.
Based on this assumption, scholars and laymen alike have looked for a solution that would involve an intrusion of Greek philosophy in a Christian setting concerning Old Testament practices (Colossians 2:16). This has led to endless debates and general frustration. What Greek philosophy would be concerned with Old Testament ceremonial laws?
The search for a direct influence of Greek philosophical schools of thought on Colossae pervades the work of ancient and modern commentators.
Clement of Alexandria (A.D. 150-215) proposed that it was the Epicureans who were involved at Colossae. A similar thought was expressed in the West by Tertullian (A.D. 160-220), and commentators have followed suit ever since. Neo-Platonic thought has also been proposed as the underlying problem at Colossae, as well as a mixture of Eastern and Western philosophy, all because of the superficial reading of the term philosophy.
Older and traditional commentators generally propose a conflict between Paul’s teaching and the discipline of philosophy. In his commentary, Thomas Scott writes, The Judaizing teachers seem to have blended their system with speculation borrowed from the Pagans, and their different sects of philosophers.
He adds: The worldly elements of heathen superstition or philosophy were blended with legal and other external observances.
Finally, he looks back at his explanation and says, Unless something of this kind be supposed, it will be found difficult to understand the apostle’s discourse: for he spoke of philosophical delusions and legal ceremonies at the same time
(Commentary, Whiting & Watson, New York, 1812, volume VI, referring to Colossians 2:8-9).
Once wrong assumptions are removed, the epistle to the Colossians can be examined with a fresh outlook on the problem.
Internal evidence
Paul attacks the heresy in Colossians 2:8-23. If we treat this passage as an oblique description of the problem, we could use the information given by Paul to draw up the following outline of its basic tenets:
1. It denied that the fullness of the Godhead dwelt bodily in Christ (2:9).
2. It denied that the Christian was complete in Christ (verse 10).
3. It tried to supplement the freedom in Christ by introducing ways of heightening Christian spirituality.
Some of the spiritual supplements, as recorded in Colossians, were:
1. circumcision (verses 11-14),
2. defunct principalities and powers (verse 15),
3. eating, drinking, new moons, sabbaths, etc. (verses 16-17),
4. voluntary humility and the worship of angels (verse 18), and
5. ascetic restrictions (touch not, taste not, etc., culminating in a neglect of the body) (verses 19-23).
The above points indicate neither that the heretics were denying the value of conversion to Christianity nor that they were endorsing a departure from the church of God at Colossae. They show that the heretics denied the adequacy of Christ (points 1 and 2). They were saying that Christians needed more for their salvation than what Jesus Christ had to