Paul the apostle, writing with Timothy included in the letter's opening greeting.
Fullness in Christ and Freedom from Christ-Plus Religion
Because all fullness dwells in Christ and believers are complete in Him, the church must continue in Him and reject every Christ-plus system that promises wisdom, holiness, or spiritual power apart from Him.
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Because all fullness dwells in Christ and believers are complete in Him, the church must continue in Him and reject every Christ-plus system that promises wisdom, holiness, or spiritual power apart from Him.
Paul argues that Christ is sufficient for wisdom, fullness, forgiveness, triumph, holiness, and maturity; therefore, believers must not be captured by systems that add human tradition, ritual obligation, mystical experience, or ascetic severity to Christ.
The believers in Colossae, along with closely connected believers in Laodicea and others who had not personally met Paul.
Paul writes from imprisonment with deep pastoral concern for believers He has not seen face to face, laboring that they would be encouraged, united in love, and protected from deceptive teaching.
Because all fullness dwells in Christ and believers are complete in Him, the church must continue in Him and reject every Christ-plus system that promises wisdom, holiness, or spiritual power apart from Him.
Paul the apostle, writing with Timothy included in the letter's opening greeting.
The believers in Colossae, along with closely connected believers in Laodicea and others who had not personally met Paul.
Paul writes from imprisonment with deep pastoral concern for believers He has not seen face to face, laboring that they would be encouraged, united in love, and protected from deceptive teaching.
- The Colossian church faced persuasive religious and philosophical pressures that promised fullness, wisdom, spiritual protection, heightened experience, or holiness through additions to Christ.
The Lycus Valley environment likely included a mix of Gentile religious ideas, local folk spirituality, concern about spiritual powers, ascetic practices, and possible Jewish ritual influences. Paul addresses the danger not by cataloging every error but by exalting Christ as the one in whom all fullness dwells.
Colossians 2 stands after the apostolic proclamation of Christ's supremacy in chapter 1 and applies that supremacy directly against every rival system. Because believers are united to Christ in His death, burial, resurrection, triumph, and fullness, they must not submit to human regulations, shadow religion, angelic mysticism, or self-made religion.
Paul moves from His pastoral struggle for the churches, to the command to continue rooted in Christ, to the declaration that all fullness is in Christ, to the warning against deceptive captivity, and finally to the exposure of legalistic, mystical, and ascetic substitutes as shadows without true spiritual power.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Colossians 2 proclaims that the gospel brings believers into fullness through union with Christ. In Christ, sinners who were dead in sins are made alive with Him, forgiven all sins, freed from the condemning record of debt, and included in the victory of His cross over the powers. The gospel does not call believers to complete Christ's work with religious add-ons; it calls them to continue in the Lord they received, rooted and built up in Him.
Paul's concern is not abstract doctrine only; He struggles for the church's encouragement, unity, assurance, and resistance to deception.
The Christian life continues in the same Christ who was received as Lord.
The fullness of Christ and the believer's union with Him protect the church from captivity to lesser powers or systems.
Old covenant calendar and purity categories must not be treated as final when their substance belongs to Christ.
Mystical experiences and false humility are exposed as dangerous when they detach believers from Christ the head.
Ascetic rule-keeping may appear wise but cannot conquer the flesh because true freedom comes through death and life with Christ.
- 2:1-5: Paul wants the believers strengthened in heart, united in love, and anchored in Christ, the treasury of all wisdom and knowledge.
- 2:6-7: The church must live in Christ Jesus the Lord, rooted, built up, established in the faith, and overflowing with thanksgiving.
- 2:8: Paul warns against hollow and deceptive philosophy rooted in human tradition and elemental spiritual forces rather than Christ.
- 2:9-15: All the fullness of Deity dwells bodily in Christ, and believers share in His fullness through union with His death, resurrection, forgiveness, and triumph.
- 2:16-17: Food laws, festivals, new moons, and Sabbaths are shadows · the reality belongs to Christ.
- 2:18-19: False humility, angelic worship, and visionary pride are rejected because they fail to hold fast to Christ, the head of the body.
- 2:20-23: Since believers died with Christ, they must not submit to man-made regulations that appear wise but cannot restrain sinful desires.
Theological Argument
Paul argues that Christ is sufficient for wisdom, fullness, forgiveness, triumph, holiness, and maturity; therefore, believers must not be captured by systems that add human tradition, ritual obligation, mystical experience, or ascetic severity to Christ.
Pastoral struggle leads to Christ-centered assurance; Christ-centered assurance leads to rooted continuance; rooted continuance protects against captivity; union with Christ grounds forgiveness and triumph; fullness in Christ frees believers from shadows, mysticism, and self-made religion.
- 1.The church needs encouragement, unity, assurance, and Christ-centered understanding.
- 2.The Christian life continues in the same Lord who was received.
- 3.Every system not according to Christ threatens captivity.
- 4.The fullness of God dwells bodily in Christ, and believers have fullness in him.
- 5.Union with Christ means death to the old order and resurrection life with him.
- 6.Christ's cross cancels debt and disarms powers.
- 7.Because Christ is the substance, believers must not be judged by shadows.
- 8.False spirituality fails when it does not hold fast to Christ the head.
- 9.Self-made religion cannot conquer the flesh.
Theological Focus
- Fullness in Christ
- Union with Christ
- Sufficiency of Christ
- Christ as the treasury of wisdom and knowledge
- Christ as head over every power and authority
- Spiritual circumcision in Christ
- Burial and resurrection with Christ
- Forgiveness of sins
- Cancellation of debt through the cross
- Christ's triumph over rulers and authorities
- Shadow and substance
- Freedom from legalistic judgment
- Warning against mystical pride
- Warning against self-made religion
- Holding fast to Christ the head
- Pastoral struggle for doctrinal stability
- Christ as the treasury of wisdom
- Continuance in Christ
- Captivity through deceptive teaching
- Bodily fullness of Deity in Christ
- Believers brought to fullness in Christ
- Union with Christ in death and resurrection
- Forgiveness and cancellation of debt
- Triumph over spiritual powers
- Failure to hold fast to the head
- Powerlessness of self-made religion
- Doctrine of Christ
- Doctrine of Union with Christ
- Doctrine of Salvation
- Doctrine of Forgiveness
- Doctrine of Spiritual Warfare
- Doctrine of Sanctification
- Doctrine of the Church
- Doctrine of Christian Liberty
- Doctrine of Scripture and Discernment
- Doctrine of Covenant Fulfillment
Theological Themes
Paul's deep struggle shows that doctrinal clarity, congregational encouragement, and love-unity belong together.
All the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are hidden in Christ, so the church must not seek ultimate wisdom in rival systems.
Believers must live in Christ as they received Him: rooted, built up, strengthened, and thankful.
Teaching that is not according to Christ may sound impressive yet function as spiritual enslavement.
The fullness of Deity dwells bodily in Christ, securing the absolute sufficiency and supremacy of the incarnate Son.
The church does not need supplemental fullness because believers share in Christ's fullness.
Believers are circumcised in Christ, buried with Him, raised with Him, and made alive with Him.
God forgives sins by canceling the record of debt that stood against sinners and nailing it to the cross.
The cross is not defeat but triumph, where God disarms rulers and authorities and publicly exposes them.
Old covenant shadows must not be treated as final because the substance belongs to Christ.
False spirituality becomes dangerous when it prizes experiences, humility-performance, or angelic fascination above union with Christ.
Ascetic regulations may appear wise but cannot restrain the flesh because they lack the power of life in Christ.
Covenant Significance
Colossians 2 shows that the old covenant shadows and external boundary markers find their substance in Christ. Believers are not made complete through ritual observance, calendar obligation, ascetic discipline, or mystical mediation, but through union with Christ in His death and resurrection.
- Circumcision fulfilled in Christ - Paul speaks of a circumcision not performed by human hands, indicating inward transformation through union with Christ rather than dependence on external covenant markers.
- Burial and resurrection with Christ - Believers share in Christ's death and resurrection, marking a decisive transition from old life to new life.
- Debt canceled at the cross - The condemning record is removed not by law-keeping but by Christ's crucifixion.
- Shadows fulfilled by substance - Food laws, festivals, new moons, and Sabbaths are not ultimate realities but anticipatory shadows whose substance belongs to Christ.
- Death to elemental forces - Union with Christ frees believers from submission to the old enslaving order and its man-made religious regulations.
- Genesis 17:9-14 - Circumcision served as a covenant sign, but Colossians 2 points to a deeper circumcision in Christ.
- Deuteronomy 10:16 - The command to circumcise the heart anticipates inward transformation beyond outward ritual.
- Deuteronomy 30:6 - God promises heart circumcision, fulfilled in new-covenant transformation through Christ.
- Leviticus 23:1-44 - Festivals formed Israel's sacred calendar, but Paul says such things were shadows whose substance belongs to Christ.
- Numbers 28:1-29:40 - New moon, Sabbath, and festival offerings provide background for the ritual categories Paul names.
- Jeremiah 31:31-34 - The new covenant promises inward knowledge of God and forgiveness of sins, both central to Colossians 2.
- Ezekiel 36:25-27 - The promise of cleansing and a new heart corresponds to the transformation implied in circumcision in Christ.
Canonical Connections
Colossians 2 develops the biblical movement from outward circumcision to inward transformation in Christ.
Paul connects salvation to union with Christ in death and resurrection.
The removal of the condemning record corresponds to the broader biblical witness that forgiveness requires atoning intervention.
Christ's cross defeats the powers and secures the believer against fear-based spirituality.
Old covenant rituals, calendar observances, and food categories point forward to fulfillment in Christ.
Growth comes from Christ the head, matching Paul's larger body theology.
Scripture repeatedly warns against substituting human commands for true devotion to God.
Cross References
Colossians 2 proclaims that the gospel brings believers into fullness through union with Christ. In Christ, sinners who were dead in sins are made alive with Him, forgiven all sins, freed from the condemning record of debt, and included in the victory of His cross over the powers. The gospel does not call believers to complete Christ's work with religious add-ons; it calls them to continue in the Lord they received, rooted and built up in Him.
- Christ is the fullness of God bodily - The gospel rests on the incarnate Son in whom all divine fullness dwells.
- Believers have fullness in Christ - The believer's completeness is received in Christ, not earned through religious advancement.
- Believers are united to Christ's death and resurrection - Salvation is participation in Christ's decisive work, not self-improvement.
- God makes the dead alive with Christ - The spiritually dead do not raise themselves · God gives life with Christ.
- God forgives all sins - Forgiveness is comprehensive and grounded in union with Christ.
- The record of debt is canceled at the cross - The charge against sinners is not ignored but removed through Christ's crucifixion.
- The powers are disarmed through the cross - The cross is the place of divine triumph, not defeat.
- Christ is the substance - The gospel brings believers to the reality to which the shadows pointed.
- Do not present Christ as the beginning of salvation and human regulations as the completion of salvation.
- Do not treat forgiveness as God overlooking sin · the record of debt was nailed to the cross.
- Do not turn baptismal imagery into mechanical salvation detached from faith in God's powerful working.
- Do not allow shadow practices to become conscience-binding conditions of standing before God.
- Do not treat mystical experiences as superior to union with Christ.
- Do not confuse external severity with heart transformation.
- Do not preach Christian freedom as lawlessness · preach it as freedom from man-made completion systems so believers may live from union with Christ.
Primary Emphasis
Colossians 2 presses the supremacy of Christ into the church's daily stability and doctrinal protection. Christ is the mystery of God, the treasury of all wisdom and knowledge, the Lord in whom believers must continue, the bodily dwelling place of all divine fullness, the head over every power and authority, the one in whom believers are circumcised, buried, raised, made alive, forgiven, and brought to fullness, and the substance to whom the shadows pointed.
The chapter insists that Christ is not merely central as a doctrine; He is sufficient against every rival claim of wisdom, holiness, mediation, fullness, and spiritual victory.
Chapter Contribution
Paul argues that Christ is sufficient for wisdom, fullness, forgiveness, triumph, holiness, and maturity; therefore, believers must not be captured by systems that add human tradition, ritual obligation, mystical experience, or ascetic severity to Christ.
Confidence rests in understanding the revealed mystery of Christ.
Freedom from legalistic judgment and ascetic regulation.
Ceremonial shadows are fulfilled in Christ.
Spiritual growth comes from connection to Christ as Head.
All the fullness of deity dwells bodily in Christ.
Legal debt is canceled and sins forgiven through the cross.
Firm and orderly faith resists persuasive deception.
All wisdom and knowledge are found in Christ alone.
Believers die with Christ and are freed from worldly decrees.
Believers are strengthened through Christ-centered unity.
Christ triumphs over rulers and authorities.
All the fullness of Deity dwells bodily in Christ; He is Lord, the mystery of God, the treasury of wisdom, the head over every power, and the head of the church.
Believers are circumcised in Christ, buried with Him, raised with Him, made alive with Him, and freed from the old order through death with Him.
God makes dead sinners alive with Christ, forgives all sins, cancels the record of debt, and grants fullness in Christ.
Forgiveness is grounded in the cross where the legal debt against sinners is canceled.
Christ's cross disarms rulers and authorities and publicly triumphs over them.
True holiness does not come from self-made religion or ascetic severity but from union with Christ and holding fast to the head.
The body grows with growth from God as it holds fast to Christ the head.
Believers must not let others judge them by shadow categories fulfilled in Christ.
All teaching must be tested by whether it accords with Christ rather than human tradition, impressive arguments, or elemental powers.
Old covenant shadows find their substance in Christ, and external signs are surpassed by inward union with Him.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Colossians 2 proclaims that the gospel brings believers into fullness through union with Christ. In Christ, sinners who were dead in sins are made alive with Him, forgiven all sins, freed from the condemning record of debt, and included in the victory of His cross over the powers. The gospel does not call believers to complete Christ's work with religious add-ons; it calls them to continue in the Lord they received, rooted and built up in Him.
Form in passage Accusative · Singular · Masculine What is this?
Sense struggle, contest, conflict
Definition An intense struggle or contest requiring effort.
References Colossians 2:1
Lexicon struggle, contest, conflict
Why it matters Paul's pastoral concern is strenuous and active, even for believers He has not seen face to face.
Form in passage Aorist · Passive · Subjunctive · 3rd Person · Plural What is this?
Sense to encourage, comfort, exhort
Definition To strengthen, comfort, summon, or exhort.
References Colossians 2:2
Lexicon to encourage, comfort, exhort
Why it matters Paul wants the church strengthened in heart against deception.
Form in passage Nominative · Plural · Feminine What is this?
Sense heart, inner person
Definition The inner center of thought, desire, will, and affection.
References Colossians 2:2
Lexicon heart, inner person
Why it matters Paul's concern is not merely intellectual correction but deep inner strengthening.
Form in passage Aorist · Passive · Participle · Plural What is this?
Sense to bring together, unite, instruct
Definition To join or knit together into unity.
References Colossians 2:2, 2:19
Lexicon to bring together, unite, instruct
Why it matters The church's defense against deception includes being united in love.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Neuter What is this?
Sense mystery, revealed divine secret
Definition A divine truth once hidden but now revealed by God.
References Colossians 2:2
Lexicon mystery, revealed divine secret
Why it matters The mystery of God is Christ, not secret knowledge beyond Christ.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense wisdom
Definition True insight for understanding and living rightly before God.
References Colossians 2:3, 2:23
Lexicon wisdom
Why it matters All treasures of wisdom are hidden in Christ, countering false claims of superior insight.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense knowledge
Definition Knowledge or understanding.
References Colossians 2:3
Lexicon knowledge
Why it matters True knowledge is found in Christ, not in speculative systems.
Form in passage Present · Middle · Subjunctive · 3rd Person · Singular What is this?
Sense to deceive by false reasoning
Definition To mislead through plausible but false argument.
References Colossians 2:4
Lexicon to deceive by false reasoning
Why it matters Paul warns that dangerous teaching may come through persuasive reasoning.
Form in passage Dative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense persuasive speech, plausible argument
Definition Speech crafted to sound convincing.
References Colossians 2:4
Lexicon persuasive speech, plausible argument
Why it matters Error often works through plausibility rather than obvious absurdity.
Form in passage Present · Active · Imperative · 2nd Person · Plural What is this?
Sense to walk, live, conduct oneself
Definition A metaphor for ongoing conduct and way of life.
References Colossians 2:6
Lexicon to walk, live, conduct oneself
Why it matters Believers must continue to live in Christ as they received Him.
Sense to root, establish firmly
Definition To become firmly rooted or established.
References Colossians 2:7
Lexicon to root, establish firmly
Why it matters Christian stability comes from being rooted in Christ.
Form in passage Present · Passive · Participle · Plural What is this?
Sense to build upon
Definition To construct or build upon a foundation.
References Colossians 2:7
Lexicon to build upon
Why it matters Believers grow by being built up in Christ rather than moving beyond Him.
Form in passage Dative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense thanksgiving, gratitude
Definition Grateful response to God's grace and provision.
References Colossians 2:7
Lexicon thanksgiving, gratitude
Why it matters Overflowing thanksgiving marks rooted life in Christ and opposes restless spiritual deficiency.
Form in passage Present · Active · Participle · Singular What is this?
Sense to carry off as spoil, take captive
Definition To capture or carry someone away as plunder.
References Colossians 2:8
Lexicon to carry off as spoil, take captive
Why it matters False teaching is not harmless; it enslaves and carries believers away from Christ.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense philosophy, love of wisdom
Definition A system or pursuit of wisdom; in this context, a hollow and deceptive system not according to Christ.
References Colossians 2:8
Lexicon philosophy, love of wisdom
Why it matters Paul targets Christless systems that claim wisdom but lead to captivity.
Form in passage Accusative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense tradition, handed-down teaching
Definition That which is handed down from one generation or group to another.
References Colossians 2:8
Lexicon tradition, handed-down teaching
Why it matters Human tradition becomes dangerous when it governs believers instead of Christ.
Form in passage Accusative · Plural · Neuter What is this?
Sense elements, elementary principles, elemental powers
Definition Basic elements, principles, or spiritual forces depending on context.
References Colossians 2:8, 2:20
Lexicon elements, elementary principles, elemental powers
Why it matters Paul contrasts captivity to the old elemental order with fullness in Christ.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Neuter What is this?
Sense fullness, completeness
Definition That which fills or the state of fullness.
References Colossians 2:9-10
Lexicon fullness, completeness
Why it matters All fullness of Deity dwells bodily in Christ, and believers have fullness in Him.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense Deity, divine nature
Definition The state or nature of being God.
References Colossians 2:9
Lexicon Deity, divine nature
Why it matters Paul affirms the full deity of Christ in bodily form.
Sense bodily, corporeally
Definition In bodily form or manner.
References Colossians 2:9
Lexicon bodily, corporeally
Why it matters The fullness of Deity dwells in the incarnate Christ, guarding against disembodied or diminished views of Him.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense head, source, authority
Definition Head as one with authority and source-like relation to the body.
References Colossians 2:10, 2:19
Lexicon head, source, authority
Why it matters Christ is head over every power and authority and head from whom the body grows.
Form in passage Dative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense circumcision
Definition The covenant sign of circumcision; here used for a Christ-centered spiritual reality.
References Colossians 2:11
Lexicon circumcision
Why it matters Paul declares believers circumcised in Christ with a circumcision not done by human hands.
Sense to bury together with
Definition To be buried together with another.
References Colossians 2:12
Lexicon to bury together with
Why it matters Believers are united with Christ in His burial, marking death to the old life.
Form in passage Aorist · Passive · Indicative · 2nd Person · Plural What is this?
Sense to raise together with
Definition To be raised together with another.
References Colossians 2:12
Lexicon to raise together with
Why it matters Believers share resurrection life with Christ through faith in God's powerful working.
Form in passage Aorist · Active · Indicative · 3rd Person · Singular What is this?
Sense to make alive together with
Definition To give life together with another.
References Colossians 2:13
Lexicon to make alive together with
Why it matters God makes spiritually dead sinners alive with Christ.
Form in passage Aorist · Middle · Participle · Singular What is this?
Sense to forgive, graciously give
Definition To grant freely or forgive graciously.
References Colossians 2:13
Lexicon to forgive, graciously give
Why it matters Forgiveness of all sins is God's gracious act in Christ.
Form in passage Accusative · Singular · Neuter What is this?
Sense written record, certificate of debt
Definition A handwritten document or record of indebtedness.
References Colossians 2:14
Lexicon written record, certificate of debt
Why it matters The condemning debt against sinners has been canceled and nailed to the cross.
Form in passage Aorist · Active · Participle · Singular What is this?
Sense to wipe out, erase, cancel
Definition To wipe away or remove completely.
References Colossians 2:14
Lexicon to wipe out, erase, cancel
Why it matters God wipes out the debt record through the cross.
Form in passage Aorist · Middle · Participle · Singular What is this?
Sense to strip off, disarm, divest
Definition To strip away or divest completely.
References Colossians 2:15
Lexicon to strip off, disarm, divest
Why it matters God strips rulers and authorities of their power through the cross.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense rulers and authorities
Definition Spiritual or cosmic powers depending on context.
References Colossians 2:10, 2:15
Lexicon rulers and authorities
Why it matters Christ is head over and triumphant over every power.
Form in passage Aorist · Active · Participle · Singular What is this?
Sense to triumph, lead in triumphal procession
Definition To triumph publicly over defeated enemies.
References Colossians 2:15
Lexicon to triumph, lead in triumphal procession
Why it matters The cross publicly displays God's victory over the powers.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense shadow
Definition A shadow or anticipatory outline of a coming reality.
References Colossians 2:17
Lexicon shadow
Why it matters Ritual observances were shadows pointing to Christ.
Sense body, substance, reality
Definition Body; in shadow/substance contrast, the reality casting the shadow.
References Colossians 2:17
Lexicon body, substance, reality
Why it matters The substance belongs to Christ, so the church must not live under shadows as though they were ultimate.
Form in passage Present · Active · Imperative · 3rd Person · Singular What is this?
Sense to disqualify, condemn, decide against
Definition To act as an umpire against someone or deprive them of a prize.
References Colossians 2:18
Lexicon to disqualify, condemn, decide against
Why it matters Paul warns believers not to allow false teachers to condemn or disqualify them through counterfeit spirituality.
Form in passage Dative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense humility, lowliness of mind
Definition Lowliness or humility; in context, a false or performative humility.
References Colossians 2:18, 2:23
Lexicon humility, lowliness of mind
Why it matters False humility can become a vehicle for pride and spiritual manipulation.
Form in passage Dative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense religious devotion involving angels
Definition Religious practice associated with angels, likely either worship directed to them or involving claims about angelic worship.
References Colossians 2:18
Lexicon religious devotion involving angels
Why it matters Paul rejects angel-centered spirituality that displaces holding fast to Christ.
Form in passage Present · Passive · Participle · Singular What is this?
Sense to puff up, inflate with pride
Definition To become conceited or inflated.
References Colossians 2:18
Lexicon to puff up, inflate with pride
Why it matters False spirituality may look humble while actually being inflated by an unspiritual mind.
Form in passage Present · Active · Participle · Singular What is this?
Sense to hold fast, grasp firmly
Definition To hold firmly or retain with strength.
References Colossians 2:19
Lexicon to hold fast, grasp firmly
Why it matters The central failure of false spirituality is failure to hold fast to Christ the head.
Sense to submit to decrees or regulations
Definition To be subject to rules, decrees, or imposed regulations.
References Colossians 2:20
Lexicon to submit to decrees or regulations
Why it matters Believers who died with Christ must not submit to man-made decrees as though they produce holiness.
Sense self-made religion, will-worship
Definition Religion invented or chosen by human will rather than commanded by God.
References Colossians 2:23
Lexicon self-made religion, will-worship
Why it matters Man-made religion may appear wise but cannot restrain sinful indulgence.
Form in passage Dative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense harsh treatment of the body
Definition Severe treatment or neglect of the body.
References Colossians 2:23
Lexicon harsh treatment of the body
Why it matters Ascetic harshness may look spiritual but has no true power against fleshly indulgence.
Form in passage Accusative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense indulgence, gratification
Definition Satisfaction or indulgence, especially of fleshly desire.
References Colossians 2:23
Lexicon indulgence, gratification
Why it matters Self-made religion lacks power to restrain the indulgence of the flesh.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
Discourse Connectives (18)
| v.1 | γὰρforgrounds / explanationAsk: what claim is this 'for' grounding? That claim is the main point. |
| v.2 | ἵναthatpurpose clauseἵνα clauses often contain the theological payoff: 'so that God might...' |
| v.4 | δὲnowcontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast.ἵναso thatpurpose clauseἵνα clauses often contain the theological payoff: 'so that God might...' |
| v.5 | εἰIfconditional clauseAsk whether Paul treats the 'if' as assumed true (1st class) or merely hypothetical.γὰρtrulygrounds / explanationAsk: what claim is this 'for' grounding? That claim is the main point.ἀλλὰyetstrong contrast / correctionAsk: what is being set aside? What is being asserted instead? |
| v.6 | οὖνthereforeinference / conclusionAsk: what has Paul argued up to this point? 'Therefore' is the payoff. |
| v.7 | καθὼςeven ascomparative / scriptural groundingWhen Paul writes καθώς γέγραπται ('just as it is written'), he is providing scriptural warrant for everything preceding it. |
| v.9 | ὅτιForcontent marker or causalIf ὅτι follows a verb of speaking/knowing/believing, it introduces content. If it follows a statement, it introduces a reason. |
| v.10 | καὶandadditive / emphaticClause-initial καί in Paul often links equal-weight clauses that should be read together. |
| v.13 | ΚαὶAndadditive / emphaticClause-initial καί in Paul often links equal-weight clauses that should be read together. |
| v.16 | οὖνthereforeinference / conclusionAsk: what has Paul argued up to this point? 'Therefore' is the payoff. |
| v.17 | δὲhowevercontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast. |
| v.19 | καὶandadditive / emphaticClause-initial καί in Paul often links equal-weight clauses that should be read together. |
| v.20 | ΕἰIfconditional clauseAsk whether Paul treats the 'if' as assumed true (1st class) or merely hypothetical.οὖνthereforeinference / conclusionAsk: what has Paul argued up to this point? 'Therefore' is the payoff. |
| v.23 | μὲνindeedcontrast setup (μέν...δέ)The μέν...δέ pair is a rhetorical hinge. Both sides matter equally. |
Discourse data: STEPBible TAGNT (CC BY 4.0)
Verb Aspect (44 main verbs)
| v.1 | Θέλωthélōwantpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthεἰδέναιeídōknowperfect active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbἔχωéchōhavepresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἑόρακανhoráōseenperfect active indicativeresultantPerfect indicative — completed action with present result |
| v.2 | παρακληθῶσινparakaléōencouragedaorist passive subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingentσυμβιβασθέντεςsymbibázōknit togetheraorist passive participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.4 | λέγωlégōsaypresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthπαραλογίζηταιparalogízomaideceivepresent middle subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingent |
| v.5 | ἄπειμιabsentpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthχαίρωνchaírōrejoicingpresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionβλέπωνseepresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.6 | παρελάβετεparalambánōreceivedaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionπεριπατεῖτεperipatéōlivepresent active imperativeimperativeImperative mood — command or exhortation |
| v.7 | βεβαιούμενοιestablishedpresent passive participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionἐδιδάχθητεdidáskōtaughtaorist passive indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionπερισσεύοντεςperisseúōaboundingpresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.8 | Βλέπετεsee to it thatpresent active imperativeimperativeImperative mood — command or exhortationσυλαγωγῶνsylagōgéōtakes ~ captivepresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.9 | κατοικεῖkatoikéōdwellspresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.11 | περιετμήθητεperitémnōcircumcisedaorist passive indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.12 | συνταφέντεςsyntháptōburied withaorist passive participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionσυνηγέρθητεsynegeírōraised withaorist passive indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionἐγείραντοςegeírōraisedaorist active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.13 | συνεζωοποίησενsyzōopoiéōmade ~ aliveaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionχαρισάμενοςcharízomaiforgivenaorist middle participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.14 | ἐξαλείψαςexaleíphōerasingaorist active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionἦρκενtakenperfect active indicativeresultantPerfect indicative — completed action with present resultπροσηλώσαςprosēlóōnailingaorist active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.15 | ἀπεκδυσάμενοςdisarmedaorist middle participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionἐδειγμάτισενdeigmatízōmade a ~ exampleaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionθριαμβεύσαςthriambeúōtriumphing overaorist active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.16 | κρινέτωkrínōjudgepresent active imperativeimperativeImperative mood — command or exhortation |
| v.17 | μελλόντωνméllōis to comepresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.18 | καταβραβευέτωkatabrabeúōdisqualifypresent active imperativeimperativeImperative mood — command or exhortationθέλωνthélōdelightingpresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionἑόρακενhoráōseenperfect active indicativeresultantPerfect indicative — completed action with present resultἐμβατεύωνembateúōclaiming access topresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionφυσιούμενοςphysióōpuffed uppresent passive participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.19 | κρατῶνkratéōholding fastpresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionαὔξειgrowspresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.20 | ἀπεθάνετεdiedaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionζῶντεςzáōlivingpresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionδογματίζεσθεdogmatízōsubmit to regulationspresent passive indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.23 | ἔχονταéchōhavepresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
Verb forms indicate aspect — not interpretive weight. Consult context before drawing conclusions about emphasis.
Clause data: MACULA Greek (Clear Bible, CC BY 4.0) · SBLGNT (Logos/SBL, CC BY 4.0)
A.T. Robertson, Word Pictures in the New Testament (1930–31) — public domain
The church must understand that Christ is not one source of spiritual fullness among many; all divine fullness dwells bodily in Him, and believers have fullness in Him.
Believers must be guarded from teachings and practices that appear wise, humble, spiritual, or disciplined while moving them away from Christ's sufficiency.
A rooted, thankful, discerning, Christ-sufficient people who hold fast to Christ the head and refuse spiritual captivity.
- Christ-centered assurance
- Discernment against persuasive arguments
- Rooted continuance
- Resting in union with Christ
- Cross-shaped assurance of forgiveness
- Freedom from shadow judgment
- Holding fast to the head
- Rejecting self-made religion
- Colossians 2 contains one of Paul's strongest warnings against Christ-plus spirituality. The danger is not merely wrong ideas but captivity: hollow philosophy, human tradition, elemental powers, ritual judgment, mystical pride, angelic fixation, and ascetic severity all threaten the church when they displace Christ's fullness and sufficiency.
- Assuming Paul rejects all philosophy, careful thinking, or theological reasoning. - Paul rejects hollow and deceptive philosophy according to human tradition and elemental forces rather than Christ. He does not reject disciplined thought governed by Christ.
- Treating 'all fullness of Deity lives bodily' as poetic exaggeration rather than doctrinal Christology. - The statement is central to Paul's argument. Christ is fully divine and incarnate · therefore believers are complete in Him.
- Using Colossians 2:11-12 to collapse baptism into automatic regeneration. - Paul ties baptismal imagery to union with Christ through faith in God's powerful working. The text stresses union, faith, and God's action, not mechanical sacramentalism.
- Reading the canceled record of debt as though God simply ignores sin. - The debt is canceled by being nailed to the cross. Forgiveness is grounded in Christ's atoning death.
- Using shadow/substance language to despise the Old Testament. - Paul does not mock the shadows. He shows their proper function as anticipatory realities fulfilled in Christ.
- Treating Christian freedom as freedom from all obedience. - Paul rejects man-made regulations as saving or completing powers, but chapter 3 will command robust holiness flowing from life in Christ.
- Confusing humility with false humility. - Paul opposes humility-performance that becomes prideful and detaches people from Christ, not true lowliness before God.
- Assuming ascetic strictness necessarily produces holiness. - Paul says such regulations may appear wise but lack power to restrain sensual indulgence.
- Treating spiritual warfare as though believers need mediators or techniques beyond Christ. - Christ is head over every power and authority, and the cross is God's triumph over the powers.
- Where am I tempted to seek assurance outside Christ?
- Do I believe all treasures of wisdom and knowledge are found in Christ, or am I hunting for a superior key elsewhere?
- What persuasive arguments sound spiritual but subtly move me away from Christ?
- Am I continuing in Christ the same way I received Him, by faith under His lordship?
- Is my life rooted and built up in Christ, or merely decorated with Christian language?
- What human traditions have I allowed to function as though they complete what Christ lacks?
- Do I live as one who has fullness in Christ, or as one who is still spiritually deficient without add-ons?
- Am I resting in the reality that my debt was canceled at the cross?
- Do I fear spiritual powers as though Christ has not disarmed them?
- Where am I letting others judge my standing before God by shadows rather than Christ?
- Am I holding fast to Christ the head, or chasing religious experiences that inflate me?
- What rules have an appearance of wisdom in my life but lack real power against sin?
- Teach assurance as Christ-centered, not experience-centered.
- Train the church to detect persuasive error.
- Define Christian growth as deeper continuance in Christ.
- Protect believers from spiritual inferiority narratives.
- Counsel guilt through the canceled debt.
- Teach spiritual warfare from Christ's triumph.
- Refuse conscience-binding where Christ has fulfilled the shadows.
- Expose false humility as pride in religious clothing.
- Keep the congregation attached to Christ the head.
- Distinguish holiness from self-made religion.
Believers move from vulnerability to deception into rooted and established life in Christ.
The church must stop living as though Christ is incomplete and must rest in the fullness believers have in Him.
The cross disarms rulers and authorities, so believers need not seek protection from rival mediators.
Believers honor the purpose of the shadows by clinging to Christ, their fulfillment.
External severity cannot defeat the flesh; new life in Christ grounds real holiness.
The church grows when it receives life, nourishment, and unity from Christ.
Study temple presence, worship, corruption, judgment, and renewal across Scripture.
Study holiness as divine character, covenant identity, and sanctified life across Scripture.
Study kingdom reign, divine rule, and gospel kingdom proclamation across Scripture.
Trace servant identity, obedient mission, and suffering service across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Paul moves from His pastoral struggle for the churches, to the command to continue rooted in Christ, to the declaration that all fullness is in Christ, to the warning against deceptive captivity, and finally to the exposure of legalistic, mystical, and ascetic substitutes as shadows without true spiritual power.
Colossians 2 shows that the old covenant shadows and external boundary markers find their substance in Christ. Believers are not made complete through ritual observance, calendar obligation, ascetic discipline, or mystical mediation, but through union with Christ in His death and resurrection.
Colossians 2 proclaims that the gospel brings believers into fullness through union with Christ. In Christ, sinners who were dead in sins are made alive with Him, forgiven all sins, freed from the condemning record of debt, and included in the victory of His cross over the powers. The gospel does not call believers to complete Christ's work with religious add-ons; it calls them to continue in the Lord they received, rooted and built up in Him.
A rooted, thankful, discerning, Christ-sufficient people who hold fast to Christ the head and refuse spiritual captivity.
Focus Points
- Fullness in Christ
- Union with Christ
- Sufficiency of Christ
- Christ as the treasury of wisdom and knowledge
- Christ as head over every power and authority
- Spiritual circumcision in Christ
- Burial and resurrection with Christ
- Forgiveness of sins
- Cancellation of debt through the cross
- Christ's triumph over rulers and authorities
- Shadow and substance
- Freedom from legalistic judgment
- Warning against mystical pride
- Warning against self-made religion
- Holding fast to Christ the head
- Pastoral struggle for doctrinal stability
- Christ as the treasury of wisdom
- Continuance in Christ
- Captivity through deceptive teaching
- Bodily fullness of Deity in Christ
- Believers brought to fullness in Christ
- Union with Christ in death and resurrection
- Forgiveness and cancellation of debt
- Triumph over spiritual powers
- Failure to hold fast to the head
- Powerlessness of self-made religion
- Doctrine of Christ
- Doctrine of Union with Christ
- Doctrine of Salvation
- Doctrine of Forgiveness
- Doctrine of Spiritual Warfare
- Doctrine of Sanctification
- Doctrine of the Church
- Doctrine of Christian Liberty
- Doctrine of Scripture and Discernment
- Doctrine of Covenant Fulfillment
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Colossians 2:1-5
How greatly I strive (ηλικον αγωνα εχω). Literally, "how great a contest I am having." The old adjectival relative ηλικος (like Latin quantus ) is used for age or size in N. T. only here and Jas 3:5 (twice, how great, how small). It is an inward contest of anxiety like the μεριμνα for all the churches ( 2Co 11:28 ). Αγωνα carries on the metaphor of αγωνιζομενος in 1:29 .
For them at Laodicea (των εν Λαοδικια). Supply υπερ as with υπερ υμων. Paul's concern extended beyond Colossae to Laodicea ( 4:16 ) and to Hierapolis ( 4:13 ), the three great cities in the Lycus Valley where Gnosticism was beginning to do harm. Laodicea is the church described as lukewarm in Re 3:14 . For as many as have not seen my face (οσο ουχ εορακαν το προσωπον μου).
The phrase undoubtedly includes Hierapolis ( 4:13 ), and a few late MSS. actually insert it here. Lightfoot suggests that Hierapolis had not yet been harmed by the Gnostics as much as Colossae and Laodicea. Perhaps so, but the language includes all in that whole region who have not seen Paul's face in the flesh (that is, in person, and not in picture). How precious a real picture of Paul would be to us today.
The antecedent to οσο is not expressed and it would be τουτων after υπερ. The form εορακαν (perfect active indicative of οραω instead of the usual εωρακασιν has two peculiarities ο in Paul's Epistles ( 1Co 9:1 ) instead of ω (see Joh 1:18 for εωρακεν) and -αν by analogy in place of -ασιν, which short form is common in the papyri. See Lu 9:36 εωρακαν.
May be comforted (παρακληθωσιν). First aorist passive subjunctive of παρακαλεω (for which see 2Co 1:3-7 ) in final clause with ινα. Being knit together (συνβιβασθεντες). First aorist passive participle of συνβιβαζω, old verb, causal of βαινω, to make go together, to coalesce in argument ( Ac 16:10 ), in spiritual growth ( Col 2:19 ), in love as here. Love is the συνδεσμος ( 3:14 ) that binds all together.
Unto all riches (εις παν πλουτος). Probably some distinction intended between εν (in love as the sphere) and εις (unto as the goal). Of the full assurance of understanding (της πληροφοριας της συνεσεως). On πληροφορια, see 1Th 1:5 . From πληροφορεω (see Lu 1:1 ) and only in N. T. ( 1Th 1:5 ; Col 2:2 ; Heb 6:11 ; 10:22 ), Clement of Rome ( Cor . 42) and one papyrus example.
Paul desires the full use of the intellect in grasping the great mystery of Christ and it calls for the full and balanced exercise of all one's mental powers. That they may know (εις επιγνωσιν). "Unto full knowledge." This use of επιγνωσις (full, additional knowledge) is Paul's reply to the Gnostics with the limited and perverted γνωσις (knowledge). The mystery of God, even Christ (του μυστηριου του θεου, Χριστου).
The MSS. differ widely here, but this is Westcott and Hort's reading. Genitive (objective) with επιγνωσιν and Χριστου in apposition. Christ is "the mystery of God," but no longer hidden, but manifested ( 1:26 ) and meant for us to know to the fulness of our capacity.
In whom (εν ω). This locative form can refer to μυστηριου or to Χριστου. It really makes no difference in sense since Christ is the mystery of God. All the treasures of wisdom and knowledge (παντες ο θησαυρο της σοφιας κα γνωσεως). See on Mt 2:11 ; 6:19-21 for this old word, our thesaurus, for coffer, storehouse, treasure. Paul confronts these pretentious intellectuals (Gnostics) with the bold claim that Christ sums up all wisdom and knowledge.
These treasures are hidden (αποκρυφο, old adjective from αποκρυπτω, to hide away, Mr 4:22 ) whether the Gnostics have discovered them or not. They are there (in Christ) as every believer knows by fresh and repeated discovery.
This I say (τουτο λεγω). Paul explains why he has made this great claim for Christ at this point in his discussion. May delude (παραλογιζητα). Present middle subjunctive of παραλογιζομα, old verb, only here in N. T. , from παρα and λογιζομα, to count aside and so wrong, to cheat by false reckoning, to deceive by false reasoning (Epictetus). With persuasiveness of speech (εν πιθανολογια).
Rare word (Plato) from πιθανος and λογος, speech, adapted to persuade, then speciously leading astray. Only here in N. T. One papyrus example. The art of persuasion is the height of oratory, but it easily degenerates into trickery and momentary and flashy deceit such as Paul disclaimed in 1Co 2:4 (ουκ εν πιθοις σοφιας λογοις) where he uses the very adjective πιθος (persuasive) of which πιθανος (both from πειθω) is another form.
It is curious how winning champions of error, like the Gnostics and modern faddists, can be with plausibility that catches the gullible.
Though (ε κα). Not κα ε (even if). Yet (αλλα). Common use of αλλα in the apodosis (conclusion) of a conditional or concessive sentence. Your order (την ταξιν). The military line (from τασσω), unbroken, intact. A few stragglers had gone over to the Gnostics, but there had been no panic, no breach in the line. Steadfastness (στερεωμα). From στερεοω (from στερεος) to make steady, and probably the same military metaphor as in ταξιν just before.
The solid part of the line which can and does stand the attack of the Gnostics. See Ac 16:5 where the verb στερεοω is used with πιστις and 1Pe 5:9 where the adjective στερεος is so used. In 2Th 3:6 , 8 , 11 Paul speaks of his own ταξις (orderly conduct).
As therefore ye received (ως ουν παρελαβετε). Second aorist active indicative of παραλαμβανω in same sense as in 1Th 4:1 ; Php 4:9 (both μανθανω and παραλαμβανω) that is like μανθανω, to learn ( 1:7 ), from Epaphras and others. Christ Jesus the Lord (τον Χριστον Ιησουν τον Κυριον). This peculiar phrase occurs nowhere else by Paul. We have often ο Χριστος (the Christ or Messiah) as in Php 1:15 , Ιησους Χριστος (Jesus Christ), Χριστος Ιησους (Christ Jesus), ο Κυριος Ιησους (the Lord Jesus, very often), but nowhere else ο Χριστος Ιησους and Ιησους ο Κυριος.
Hence it is plain that Paul here meets the two forms of Gnostic heresy about the Person of Christ (the recognition of the historical Jesus in his actual humanity against the Docetic Gnostics, the identity of the Christ or Messiah with this historical Jesus against the Cerinthian Gnostics, and the acknowledgment of him as Lord). "As therefore ye received the Christ (the Messiah), Jesus the Lord."
Ye were taught right. Walk in him (εν αυτω περιπατειτε). "Go on walking in him" (present active indicative of περιπατεω). Stick to your first lessons in Christ.
Rooted (ερριζωμενο). Perfect passive participle of old verb ριζοω from ριζα, root. In N. T. only here and Eph 3:17 . Paul changes the figure from walk to growing tree. Builded up in him (εποικοδομουμενο εν αυτω). Present passive participle (rooted to stay so) of εποικοδομεω, old verb, to build upon as in 1Co 3:10 , 12 . The metaphor is changed again to a building as continually going up (present tense).
Stablished (βεβαιουμενο). Present passive participle of βεβαιοω, old verb from βεβαιος (from βαινω, βαιω), to make firm or stable. In your faith (τη πιστε). Locative case, though the instrumental case, by your faith , makes good sense also. Even as ye were taught (καθως εδιδαχθητε). First aorist passive indicative of διδασκω, an allusion to παρελαβετε in verse 6 and to εμαθετε in 1:7 .
In thanksgiving (εν ευχαριστια). Hence they had no occasion to yield to the blandishments of the Gnostic teachers.
Take heed (βλεπετε). Present active imperative second person plural of βλεπω, common verb for warning like our "look out," "beware," "see to it." Lest there shall be any one (μη τις εστα). Negative purpose with the future indicative, though the aorist subjunctive also occurs as in 2Co 12:6 . That maketh spoil of you (ο συλαγωγων). Articular present active participle of συλαγωγεω, late and rare (found here first) verb (from συλη, booty, and αγω, to lead, to carry), to carry off as booty a captive, slave, maiden.
Only here in N. T. Note the singular here. There was some one outstanding leader who was doing most of the damage in leading the people astray. Through his philosophy (δια της φιλοσοφιας). The only use of the word in the N. T. and employed by Paul because the Gnostics were fond of it. Old word from φιλοσοφος (φιλοσ, σοφος, one devoted to the pursuit of wisdom) and in N.
T. only in Ac 17:18 . Paul does not condemn knowledge and wisdom (see verse 2 ), but only this false philosophy, "knowledge falsely named" (ψευδωνυμος γνωσις, 1Ti 6:20 ), and explained here by the next words. And vain deceit (κα κενης απατης). Old word for trick, guile, like riches ( Mt 13:22 ). Descriptive of the philosophy of the Gnostics. Tradition (παραδοσιν).
Old word from παραδιδωμ, a giving over, a passing on. The word is colourless in itself. The tradition may be good ( 2Th 2:15 ; 3:6 ) or bad ( Mr 7:3 ). Here it is worthless and harmful, merely the foolish theories of the Gnostics. Rudiments (στοιχεια). Old word for anything in a στοιχος (row, series) like the letters of the alphabet, the materials of the universe ( 2 Peter 3:10 , 12 ), elementary teaching ( Heb 5:12 ), elements of Jewish ceremonial training ( Ac 15:10 ; Gal 4:3 , 9 ), the specious arguments of the Gnostic philosophers as here with all their aeons and rules of life.
And not after Christ (κα ου κατα Χριστον). Christ is the yardstick by which to measure philosophy and all phases of human knowledge. The Gnostics were measuring Christ by their philosophy as many men are doing today. They have it backwards. Christ is the measure for all human knowledge since he is the Creator and the Sustainer of the universe.
For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily (οτ εν αυτω κατοικε παν το πληρωμα της θεοτητος σωματικως). In this sentence, given as the reason (οτ, because) for the preceding claim for Christ as the measure of human knowledge Paul states the heart of his message about the Person of Christ. There dwells (at home) in Christ not one or more aspects of the Godhead (the very εσσενχε of God, from θεοσ, δειτας) and not to be confused with θειοτες in Ro 1:20 (from θειος, the quality of God, divinitas ), here only in N.
T. as θειοτης only in Ro 1:20 . The distinction is observed in Lucian and Plutarch. Θειοτης occurs in the papyri and inscriptions. Paul here asserts that "all the πληρωμα of the Godhead," not just certain aspects, dwells in Christ and in bodily form (σωματικως, late and rare adverb, in Plutarch, inscription, here only in N. T.) , dwells now in Christ in his glorified humanity ( Php 2:9-11 ), "the body of his glory" (τω σωματ της δοξης).
The fulness of the God-head was in Christ before the Incarnation ( Joh 1:1 , 18 ; Php 2:6 ), during the Incarnation ( Joh 1:14 , 18 ; 1Jo 1:1-3 ). It was the Son of God who came in the likeness of men ( Php 2:7 ). Paul here disposes of the Docetic theory that Jesus had no human body as well as the Cerinthian separation between the man Jesus and the aeon Christ.
He asserts plainly the deity and the humanity of Jesus Christ in corporeal form.
Ye are made full (εστε πεπληρωμενο). Periphrastic perfect passive indicative of πληροω, but only one predicate, not two. Christ is our fulness of which we all partake ( Joh 1:16 ; Eph 1:23 ) and our goal is to be made full of God in Christ ( Eph 3:19 ). "In Christ they find the satisfaction of every spiritual want" (Peake). The head (η καφαλη). There is no other place for Christ. He is first ( 1:18 ) in time and in rank. All rule and authority comes after Christ whether angels, aeons, kings, what not.
Ye were also circumcised (κα περιετμηθητε). First aorist passive indicative of περιτεμνω, to circumcise. But used here as a metaphor in a spiritual sense as in Ro 2:29 "the circumcision of the heart." Not made with hands (αχειροποιητω). This late and rare negative compound verbal occurs only in the N. T. ( Mr 14:58 ; 2Co 5:1 ; Col 2:11 ) by merely adding α privative to the old verbal χειροποιητος ( Ac 7:48 ; Eph 2:11 ), possibly first in Mr 14:58 where both words occur concerning the temple.
In 2Co 5:1 the reference is to the resurrection body. The feminine form of this compound adjective is the same as the masculine. In the putting off (εν τη απεκδυσε). As if an old garment (the fleshly body). From απεκδυομα ( Col 2:15 , possibly also coined by Paul) and occurring nowhere else so far as known. The word is made in a perfectly normal way by the perfective use of the two Greek prepositions (απο, εκ), "a resource available for and generally used by any real thinker writing Greek" (Moulton and Milligan, Vocabulary ).
Paul had as much right to mint a Greek compound as any one and surely no one ever had more ideas to express and more power in doing it. Of Christ (του Χριστου). Specifying genitive, the kind of circumcision that belongs to Christ, that of the heart.
Having been buried with him in baptism (συνταφεντες αυτω εν τω βαπτισματ). Second aorist passive participle of συνθαπτω, old word, in N. T. only here and Ro 6:4 , followed by associative instrumental case (αυτω). Thayer's Lexicon says: "For all who in the rite of baptism are plunged under the water, thereby declare that they put faith in the expiatory death of Christ for the pardon of their past sins."
Yes, and for all future sins also. This word gives Paul's vivid picture of baptism as a symbolic burial with Christ and resurrection also to newness of life in him as Paul shows by the addition "wherein ye were also raised with him" (εν ω κα συνηγερθητε). "In which baptism" (βαπτισματ, he means). First aorist passive indicative of συνεγειρω, late and rare verb (Plutarch for waking up together), in LXX, in N.
T. only in Col 2:12 ; 3:1 ; Eph 2:6 . In the symbol of baptism the resurrection to new life in Christ is pictured with an allusion to Christ's own resurrection and to our final resurrection. Paul does not mean to say that the new life in Christ is caused or created by the act of baptism. That is grossly to misunderstand him. The Gnostics and the Judaizers were sacramentalists, but not so Paul the champion of spiritual Christianity.
He has just given the spiritual interpretation to circumcision which itself followed Abraham's faith ( Ro 4:10-12 ). Cf. Ga 3:27 . Baptism gives a picture of the change already wrought in the heart "through faith" (δια της πιστεως). In the working of God (της ενεργειας του θεου). Objective genitive after πιστεως. See 1:29 for ενεργεια. God had power to raise Christ from the dead (του εγειραντος, first aorist active participle of εγειρω, the fact here stated) and he has power (energy) to give us new life in Christ by faith.
And you (κα υμας). Emphatic position, object of the verb συνεζωοποιησεν (did he quicken) and repeated (second υμας). You Gentiles as he explains. Being dead through your trespasses (νεκρους οντας τοις παραπτωμασιν). Moral death, of course, as in Ro 6:11 ; Eph 2:1 , 5 . Correct text does not have εν, but even so παραπτωμασιν (from παραπιπτω, to fall beside or to lapse, Heb 6:6 ), a lapse or misstep as in Mt 6:14 ; Ro 5:15-18 ; Ga 6:1 , can be still in the locative, though the instrumental makes good sense also.
And the uncircumcision of your flesh (κα τη ακροβουστια της σαρκος υμων). "Dead in your trespasses and your alienation from God, of which the uncircumcision of your flesh was a symbol" (Abbott). Clearly so, "the uncircumcision" used merely in a metaphorical sense. Did he quicken together with him (συνεζωοποιησεν συν αυτω). First aorist active indicative of the double compound verb συνζωοποιεω, to make alive (ζωοσ, ποιεω) with (συν, repeated also with αυτω, associative instrumental), found only here and in Eph 2:5 , apparently coined by Paul for this passage.
Probably θεος (God) is the subject because expressly so stated in Eph 2:4 f. and because demanded by συν αυτω here referring to Christ. This can be true even if Christ be the subject of ηρκεν in verse 14 . Having forgiven us (χαρισαμενος ημιν). First aorist middle participle of χαριζομα, common verb from χαρις (favour, grace). Dative of the person common as in 3:13 .
The act of forgiving is simultaneous with the quickening, though logically antecedent.
Having blotted out (εξαλειψας). And so "cancelled." First aorist active participle of old verb εξαλειφω, to rub out, wipe off, erase. In N. T. only in Ac 3:19 (LXX); Re 3:5 ; Col 2:14 . Here the word explains χαρισαμενος and is simultaneous with it. Plato used it of blotting out a writing. Often MSS. were rubbed or scraped and written over again (palimpsests, like Codex C).
The bond written in ordinances that was against us (το καθ' ημων χειρογραφον τοις δογμασιν). The late compound χειρογραφον (χειρ, hand, γραφω) is very common in the papyri for a certificate of debt or bond, many of the original χειρογραφα (handwriting, "chirography"). See Deissmann, Bible Studies , p. 247. The signature made a legal debt or bond as Paul says in Phm 1:18 f.
: "I Paul have written it with mine own hand, I will repay it." Many of the papyri examples have been "crossed out" thus X as we do today and so cancelled. One decree is described as "neither washed out nor written over" (Milligan, N. T. Documents , p. 16). Undoubtedly "the handwriting in decrees" (δογμασιν, the Mosaic law, Eph 2:15 ) was against the Jews ( Ex 24:3 ; De 27:14-26 ) for they accepted it, but the Gentiles also gave moral assent to God's law written in their hearts ( Ro 2:14 f.
). So Paul says "against us" (καθ' ημων) and adds "which was contrary to us" (ο ην υπεναντιον ημιν) because we (neither Jew nor Gentile) could not keep it. Hυπεναντιος is an old double compound adjective (υπο, εν, αντιος) set over against, only here in N. T. except Heb 10:27 when it is used as a substantive. It is striking that Paul has connected the common word χειρογραφον for bond or debt with the Cross of Christ (Deissmann, Light, etc.
, p. 332). And he hath taken it out of the way (κα ηρκεν εκ του μεσου). Perfect active indicative of αιρω, old and common verb, to lift up, to bear, to take away. The word used by the Baptist of Jesus as "the Lamb of God that bears away (αιρων) the sin of the world" ( Joh 1:29 ). The perfect tense emphasizes the permanence of the removal of the bond which has been paid and cancelled and cannot be presented again.
Lightfoot argues for Christ as the subject of ηρκεν, but that is not necessary, though Paul does use sudden anacolutha. God has taken the bond against us "out of the midst" (εκ του μεσου). Nailing it to the cross (προσηλωσας αυτο τω σταυρω). First aorist active participle of old and common verb προσηλοω, to fasten with nails to a thing (with dative σταυρω). Here alone in N.
T. , but in III Macc. 4:9 with the very word σταυρω. The victim was nailed to the cross as was Christ. "When Christ was crucified, God nailed the Law to His cross" (Peake). Hence the "bond" is cancelled for us. Business men today sometimes file cancelled accounts. No evidence exists that Paul alluded to such a custom here.
Having put off from himself (απεκδυσαμενος). Only here and 3:9 and one MS. of Josephus (απεκδυς). Both αποδυω and εκδυω occur in ancient writers. Paul simply combines the two for expression of complete removal. But two serious problems arise here. Is God or Christ referred to by απεκδυσαμενος? What is meant by "the principalities and the powers" (τας αρχας κα τας εξουσιας)?
Modern scholars differ radically and no full discussion can be attempted here as one finds in Lightfoot, Haupt, Abbott, Peake. On the whole I am inclined to look on God as still the subject and the powers to be angels such as the Gnostics worshipped and the verb to mean "despoil" (American Standard Version) rather than "having put off from himself." In the Cross of Christ God showed his power openly without aid or help of angels.
He made a show of them (εδειγματισεν). First aorist active indicative of δειγματιζω, late and rare verb from δειγμα ( Jude 1:7 ), an example, and so to make an example of. Frequent in the papyri though later than παραδειγματιζω and in N. T. only here and Mt 1:19 of Joseph's conduct toward Mary. No idea of disgrace is necessarily involved in the word. The publicity is made plain by "openly" (εν παρρησια).
Triumphing over them on it (θριαμβευσας αυτους εν αυτω). On the Cross the triumph was won. This late, though common verb in Koine writers (εκθριαμβευω in the papyri) occurs only twice in the N. T. , once "to lead in triumph" ( 2Co 2:14 ), here to celebrate a triumph (the usual sense). It is derived from θριαμβος, a hymn sung in festal procession and is kin to the Latin triumphus (our triumph), a triumphal procession of victorious Roman generals.
God won a complete triumph over all the angelic agencies (αυτους, masculine regarded as personal agencies). Lightfoot adds, applying θριαμβευσας to Christ: "The convict's gibbet is the victor's car." It is possible, of course, to take αυτω as referring to χειρογραφον (bond) or even to Christ.
Let no one judge you (μη τις υμας κρινετω). Prohibition present active imperative third singular, forbidding the habit of passing judgment in such matters. For κρινω see on Mt 7:1 . Paul has here in mind the ascetic regulations and practices of one wing of the Gnostics (possibly Essenic or even Pharisaic influence). He makes a plea for freedom in such matters on a par with that in 1Co 8-9 ; Ro 14 ; 15 .
The Essenes went far beyond the Mosaic regulations. For the Jewish feasts see on Ga 4:10 . Josephus ( Ant . III. 10, 1) expressly explains the "seventh day" as called " sabbata " (plural form as here, an effort to transliterate the Aramaic sabbathah ).
A shadow (σκια). Old word, opposed to substance (σωμα, body). In Heb 10:1 σκια is distinguished from εικων (picture), but here from σωμα (body, substance). The σωμα (body) casts the σκια (shadow) and so belongs to Christ (Χριστου, genitive case).
Rob you of your prize (καταβραβευετω). Late and rare compound (κατα, βραβευω, Col 3:15 ) to act as umpire against one, perhaps because of bribery in Demosthenes and Eustathius (two other examples in Preisigke's Worterbuch ), here only in the N. T. So here it means to decide or give judgment against. The judge at the games is called βραβευς and the prize βραβειον ( 1Co 9:24 ; Php 3:14 ).
It is thus parallel to, but stronger than, κρινετω in verse 16 . By a voluntary humility (θελων εν ταπεινοφροσυνη). Present active participle of θελω, to wish, to will, but a difficult idiom. Some take it as like an adverb for "wilfully" somewhat like θελοντας in 2 Peter 3:5 . Others make it a Hebraism from the LXX usage, "finding pleasure in humility." The Revised Version margin has "of his own mere will, by humility."
Hort suggested εν εθελοταπεινοφροσυνη (in gratuitous humility), a word that occurs in Basil and made like εθελοθρησκια in verse 23 . And worshipping of the angels (κα θρησκεια των αγγελων). In 3:12 humility (ταπεινοφροσυνην) is a virtue, but it is linked with worship of the angels which is idolatry and so is probably false humility as in verse 23 . They may have argued for angel worship on the plea that God is high and far removed and so took angels as mediators as some men do today with angels and saints in place of Christ.
Dwelling in the things which he hath seen (α εορακεν εμβατευων). Some MSS. have "not," but not genuine. This verb εμβατευω (from εμβατης, stepping in, going in) has given much trouble. Lightfoot has actually proposed κενεμβατευων (a verb that does not exist, though κενεμβατεω does occur) with αιωρα, to tread on empty air, an ingenious suggestion, but now unnecessary.
It is an old word for going in to take possession (papyri examples also). W. M. Ramsay ( Teaching of Paul , pp. 287ff.) shows from inscriptions in Klaros that the word is used of an initiate in the mysteries who "set foot in" (ενεβατευσεν) and performed the rest of the rites. Paul is here quoting the very work used of these initiates who "take their stand on" these imagined revelations in the mysteries.
Vainly puffed up (εικη φυσιουμενος). Present passive participle of φυσιοω, late and vivid verb from φυσα, pair of bellows, in N. T. only here and 1Co 4:6 , 18 f. ; 8:1 . Powerful picture of the self-conceit of these bombastic Gnostics.
Not holding fast the Head (ου κρατων την κεφαλην). Note negative ου, not μη, actual case of deserting Christ as the Head. The Gnostics dethroned Christ from his primacy ( 1:18 ) and placed him below a long line of aeons or angels. They did it with words of praise for Christ as those do now who teach Christ as only the noblest of men. The headship of Christ is the keynote of this Epistle to the Colossians and the heart of Paul's Christology.
From whom (εξ ου). Masculine ablative rather than εξ ης (κεφαλης) because Christ is the Head. He develops the figure of the body of which Christ is Head ( 1:18 , 24 ). Being supplied (επιχορηγουμενον). Present passive participle (continuous action) of επιχορηγεω, for which interesting verb see already 2Co 9:10 ; Ga 3:5 and further 2 Peter 1:5 . Knit together (συνβιβαζομενον).
Present passive participle also (continuous action) of συνβιβαζω, for which see Col 2:2 . Through the joints (δια των αφων). Late word αφη (from απτω, to fasten together), connections ( junctura and nexus in the Vulgate). And bonds (κα συνδεσμων). Old word from συνδεω, to bind together. Aristotle and Galen use it of the human body. Both words picture well the wonderful unity in the body by cells, muscles, arteries, veins, nerves, skin, glands, etc.
It is a marvellous machine working together under the direction of the head. Increaseth with the increase of God (αυξε την αυξησιν του θεου). Cognate accusative (αυξησιν) with the old verb αυξε.
If ye died (ε απεθανετε). Condition of the first class, assumed as true, ε and second aorist active indicative of αποθνησκω, to die. He is alluding to the picture of burial in baptism ( 2:12 ). From the rudiments of the world (απο των στοιχειων του κοσμου). See 2:8 . As though living in the world (ως ζωντες εν κοσμω). Concessive use of the participle with ως.
The picture is that of baptism, having come out (F. B. Meyer) on the other side of the grave, we are not to act as though we had not done so. We are in the Land of Beulah. Why do ye subject yourselves to ordinances? (τ δογματιζεσθε?) Late and rare verb (three examples in inscriptions and often in LXX) made from δογμα, decree or ordinance. Here it makes good sense either as middle or passive.
In either case they are to blame since the bond of decrees ( 2:14 ) was removed on the Cross of Christ. Paul still has in mind the rules of the ascetic wing of the Gnostics ( 2:16 ff. ).
Handle not, nor taste, nor touch (μη αψη μηδε γευση μηδε θιγηις). Specimens of Gnostic rules. The Essenes took the Mosaic regulations and carried them much further and the Pharisees demanded ceremonially clean hands for all food. Later ascetics (the Latin commentators Ambrose, Hilary, Pelagius) regard these prohibitions as Paul's own instead of those of the Gnostics condemned by him.
Even today men are finding that the noble prohibition law needs enlightened instruction to make it effective. That is true of all law. The Pharisees, Essenes, Gnostics made piety hinge on outward observances and rules instead of inward conviction and principle. These three verbs are all in the aorist subjunctive second person singular with μη, a prohibition against handling or touching these forbidden things.
Two of them do not differ greatly in meaning. Hαψη is aorist middle subjunctive of απτω, to fasten to, middle, to cling to, to handle. Θιγηις is second aorist active subjunctive of θιγγανω, old verb, to touch, to handle. In N. T. only here and Heb 11:28 ; 12:20 . Γευση is second aorist middle subjunctive of γευω, to give taste of, only middle in N. T. to taste as here.
Are to perish with the using (εστιν εις φθοραν τη αποχρησε). Literally, "are for perishing in the using." Φθορα (from φθειρω) is old word for decay, decomposition. Αποχρησις (from αποχραομα, to use to the full, to use up), late and rare word (in Plutarch), here only in N.T. Either locative case here or instrumental. These material things all perish in the use of them.
Which things (ατινα). "Which very things," these ascetic regulations. Have indeed a show of wisdom (εστιν λογον μεν εχοντα σοφιας). Periphrastic present indicative with εστιν in the singular, but present indicative εχοντα in the plural (ατινα). Λογον σοφιας is probably "the repute of wisdom" (Abbott) like Plato and Herodotus. Μεν (in deed) has no corresponding δε.
In will-worship (εν εθελοθρησκια). This word occurs nowhere else and was probably coined by Paul after the pattern of εθελοδουλεια, to describe the voluntary worship of angels (see 2:18 ). And humility (κα ταπεινοφροσυνη). Clearly here the bad sense, "in mock humility." And severity to the body (κα αφειδια σωματος). Old word (Plato) from αφειδης, unsparing (α privative, φειδομα, to spare).
Here alone in N. T. Ascetics often practice flagellations and other hardnesses to the body. Not of any value (ουκ εν τιμη τιν). Τιμη usually means honour or price. Against the indulgence of the flesh (προς πλησμονην της σαρκος). These words are sharply debated along with τιμη just before. It is not unusual for προς to be found in the sense of "against" rather than "with" or "for."
See προς in sense of against in 3:13 ; Eph 6:11 f. ; 2Co 5:12 ; 1Co 6:1 . Πλησμονη is an old word from πιμπλημ, to fill and means satiety. It occurs here only in the N. T. Peake is inclined to agree with Hort and Haupt that there is a primitive corruption here. But the translation in the Revised Version is possible and it is true that mere rules do not carry us very far in human conduct as every father or mother knows, though we must have some regulations in family and state and church.
But they are not enough of themselves.