Colossians 2:6-15 Nailed to the Cross

From 2Timothy2.org
Revision as of 16:21, 20 July 2023 by Wakefien (talk | contribs) (Body Read all of Colossians 2:6-15)

Jump to: navigation, search

Theological Proposition/Focus: Jesus defeated sin, canceling our debt, disarming His enemies, and making alive those who were formerly hopeless.

Homiletical Proposition/Application: We need to remind ourselves of the fundamental truth of the Gospel, our debt has been canceled!

Introduction:

Image: Memory tricks - putting items to music

I don't know about you but one of the best ways I know to memorize something is to put it to music. Music is a powerful tool. Certainly, there are plenty of songs out there that have meaningless lyrics, but there are also some songs with deep truths embedded, truths worth memorizing.

Preview: Today we are going to look at Colossians 2:6-15 as we understand the significance of the fact that our sins are nailed to the cross

Setting the Stage:

The book of Colossians was written to Christians living in the small city of Colossae around 62 BC. At this point Paul was in prison in Rome and the church in Colossae was dealing with what we might call proto-gnosticism. A budding heresy that undermined Christ's supremacy and sufficiency. The church was in danger of losing it's focus and Paul writes what might be the most Christ-centered letter of all. Colossians 2 is all about the fullness that we have in Christ's sufficiency.

Body Read all of Colossians 2:6-15

The Christian should stand firm rooted, built-up, and established in the faith that Jesus's payment is sufficient. (2:6-8)

A universal problem: We each have sinned and will sin.

The Gospel fundamentally is the message that all have sinned but placing one's faith in Christ grants forgiveness.

Romans 3:23 tells us that "for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God,"

All means all and there really is no debate. Each of us here today has a past. We have all sinned. We have all fallen short of God's glory.

Romans 10:9-10 follows with an apt description of the Gospel

"If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. 10 For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you profess your faith and are saved."

=It is easy as ABC "wait wrong song..." Admit, Believe, Confess.

This is all it takes to be a Christian!

But does this means that the sin problem is eliminated? No

1 John 1:8-9 states "8 If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us. 9 If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness."

In reality, what we are seeing is that always

The solution: Christ, the Savior.

For those of you who have accepted Christ as your savior do you remember that feeling of freedom you had when you first made the decision? What I want to tell you right now is that feeling is still available to you.

Paul says, "just as you received Christ Jesus, continue to live your lives in him" (verse 6)

The power that freed you from the penalty from sin all those years ago is still available!

The reminder: the truth of the Gospel is both a past and present reality for the Christian.

Something that stands out is that reception of the Gospel is not just intellectual consent, no it is a present living, rooted, built-up and established.

Continuing to live in Christ involves
being rooted - the roots of a plant are the means by which a plant draws up the nourishment from the soil!

Our roots are in Christ in that we draw from Christ our nourishment. If you plan something soil without nourishment it will never grow strong.

Built up - strong soil is critical for a large plant to grow.

Anything less than Christ will result in poor growth!

The danger: Never forget that Christ is sufficient.

In verse 8 Paul moves from a call to remain firm in the faith to a warning against those who might forget that Christ is sufficient.

The idea of someone taking a Christian captive with empty deceit is a dramatic picture of someone who is trapped in empty philosophy (the "and" in "philosophy and empty deceit" is probably epexegetical).

Gnosticism, which was in its early stages here denied the sufficiency of Christ instead suggesting that in addition to Christ one needed special knowledge to be saved from sin.

To this Paul reminds the church, don't be fooled, don't be taken captive, all you need is Christ!

Image: The Aviation Safety Reporting System.

Aviation Safety Reporting System, or ASRS, is a program that the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) implemented with the help of NASA to allow voluntary confidential reporting of rule violations in the interest of improving aviation safety. The FAA offers limited immunity to an individual who reports safety events that do not result in an accident. What this means is that if someone violates a rule and files an ASRS report then they have a great deal of protection from enforcement action. In college, I took an aviation law class from a lawyer and what he told us was that if we ever had anything questionable then we should file the report. If the FAA came knocking then simply show them the report and they would move on. Now woeful intentional acts were different but in general a pilot who wisely uses the ASRS system is a pilot who will avoid being judged by the FAA.

There is a sense in which this is a picture of what Christ has done for us. The truth of the Gospel is that Christ's payment is sufficient for our sin. We should preach the gospel to ourselves, and remind ourselves of the Gospel.

Image: Nailed to the Cross by Rend Collective - Verse 1 and 2

When I stand accused by my regrets And the devil roars his empty threats I will preach the gospel to myself That I am not a man condemned For Jesus Christ is my defense

When my doubt and shame hang over me Like the arrows of the enemy I will run again to Calvary That rugged hill of hell's defeat My fortress and my victory

MTR: Take a minute, preach the Gospel to yourself. All you need is Christ.

The Christian is brought to fullness in the resurrected Christ. (2:9-12)

Christ is fully God and has full divine authority.

For the Christian, fulness is only possible through Christ.

The resurrection of Christ ensures our eternal hope.

Image: Nailed to the Cross by Rend Collective - Verse 3

When I stand before the throne at last His blood will plead my innocence I will worship Him with holy hands And raise the song that never ends Of Jesus Christ, my righteousness

The debt of sin has been canceled never again to be counted against us having been nailed to the cross. (2:13-15)

Though once dead in sins, the Christian is made alive in Christ.

All the debt accrued through sins has been canceled.

The cross, an object of scorn and shame, has become the greatest victory imaginable.

Image: Nailed to the Cross by Rend Collective - Verse Chorus and Bridge

My sin is nailed to the cross My soul is healed by the scars The weight of guilt I bear no more Praise the Lord, praise the Lord My sin is nailed to the cross My soul is healed by the scars Now I'm alive forevermore Praise the Lord, praise the Lord It is finished, sin is vanquished Hallelujah, praise the Lord All the glory, all the honor To my Savior, Christ the Lord It is finished, sin is vanquished Hallelujah, praise the Lord All the glory, all the honor To my Savior, Christ the Lord