Verses 1-3
Colossians 2:1-3. I would, &c. —
The apostle having declared, in
the latter part of the preceding
chapter, the commission which
Christ had given to his apostles
to preach salvation to the
Gentiles through his death, and
having described his own labours
as an apostle in preaching that
great blessing, and thereby
having shown what great
obligations mankind were under
to him for communicating and
perpetuating such interesting
discoveries; he begins this
second chapter with expressing
an earnest desire that the
Colossians knew what a great
concern he was under for their
establishment in grace, and that
of others, to whom he had not
personally ministered. That ye
knew what great conflict — Of
care, desire, prayer; I have —
The original expression is taken
from the athletic exercises of
the Greeks, and expresses the
great solicitude, or agony of
mind, the apostle was in on
their account. For you — Not
only for the members of such
churches as I myself have been
the instrument of planting, and
among whom I have exercised my
ministry in person, but for
those among whom I have not so
ministered; and for them at
Laodicea, and as many as have
not seen my face, &c. — For my
concern for the spread of the
gospel, and the salvation of the
heathen, is influenced, not by
considerations of personal
friendship for those whom I
particularly know and love, but
by a benevolent regard for the
good of mankind in general,
known or unknown, that they may
receive and retain this glorious
revelation, and have it
delivered to them with all
possible advantage. It appears
to have grieved the apostle to
think how incapable he was
rendered of serving them
otherwise than by his letters
and prayers. And should not this
language inspire every minister
who reads this, with an earnest
desire to use his liberty to the
best of purposes, and to exert
himself as much as, under such
confinement, he would wish he
had done? That their hearts may
be comforted — With the
consolations of the Holy Ghost,
and animated to every holy
affection and beneficent action.
This the original word implies,
signifying, not only to have
consolation administered under
affliction, but to be quickened
and excited to zeal and
diligence; being knit together —
συμβιβασθεντων, compacted; in
mutual Christian love — To the
whole body, and to Christ the
head of it; unto all riches of
the full assurance of
understanding — That is, unto
the fullest and clearest
knowledge of the gospel, here
termed the mystery of God, even
of the Father, and of Christ, in
whom — Or in which mystery, (as
may be intended,) and not in any
or all of the heathen mysteries;
are hid all the treasures of
wisdom and knowledge — Christ
being himself the wisdom of God
incarnate, and his gospel the
most perfect and glorious
revelation which God ever made,
or will make to mankind.
Verse 4-5
Colossians 2:4-5. And this, I
say — Concerning the perfection
of Christ and his gospel, and
the treasures of wisdom and
knowledge contained therein;
lest any man should beguile you
(see the margin) with enticing
words — Of human philosophy, and
science falsely so called, and
should draw you off from a
proper attachment to the truth
as it is in Jesus. For though I
be absent from you in body, yet
I am with you in the spirit —
The apostle not only seems to
mean that his heart was much
interested in all their
concerns, but that God now, by
the revelation of his Spirit,
gave him a particular view of
their circumstances, as he gave
Elisha to see Gehazi running
after Naaman, and receiving a
present from him, 2 Kings
5:25-26. Not that there is any
reason to suppose that either
the apostle or Elisha possessed
any permanent gift, whereby they
had the knowledge of all the
things done in their absence by
those in whose conduct they were
particularly concerned. The
anxiety which St. Paul felt on
various occasions, from his
uncertainty as to the affairs of
different churches, is
inconsistent with such a
supposition respecting him; and
we have no reason to suppose
that Elisha possessed a gift of
this kind superior to what was
conferred on the apostle. But a
particular revelation on some
certain occasions either of them
might have; and such a one the
latter seems to have had at this
time concerning the state of the
church at Colosse; as other
apostles probably had respecting
other churches, persons, or
things. See Acts 5:3; Acts 5:8.
Joying and beholding — Or,
beholding with joy; your order —
That is, your orderly walking;
and the steadfastness of your
faith — Which your enemies in
vain endeavour to shake.
Verse 6-7
Colossians 2:6-7. As, or since,
ye have received Christ Jesus
the Lord — Have acknowledged
Jesus of Nazareth to be the true
Messiah promised to the Jews,
and consequently a
divinely-commissioned Teacher,
Mediator, Saviour, and Lawgiver;
yea, the great Prophet, Priest,
and King of his church, and
therefore your sovereign Lord,
and the final Judge of men and
angels; so walk ye in him — Let
your spirit and conduct, your
dispositions, words, and
actions, be in perfect
consistency with this
acknowledgment; walk in the same
faith, love, and holiness, in
which you received him, steadily
believing his doctrines, obeying
his precepts, relying on his
promises, revering his
threatenings, and imitating his
example; rooted — In him, as
trees in a good soil, or as the
graft is rooted in the stock;
and built — Upon him, the only
sure foundation of your
confidence and hope for time and
eternity; and established in the
faith — In your persuasion of
the truth and importance of the
gospel in all its parts; as ye
have been taught — By those that
have preached it to you;
abounding therein — Making
continual progress in your
acquaintance with it and
conformity to it; with
thanksgiving — To God, for
having made you partakers of so
great a blessing.
Verse 8
Colossians 2:8. Beware lest any
man spoil you — ΄η τις υμας
εσται ο συλαγωγων, lest there be
any one who makes a prey of you;
through philosophy — The
pretended wisdom of the heathen
philosophers; and vain deceit —
Sophistical and delusive
reasonings, and unprofitable
speculations. “The apostle,” as
Macknight justly observes, “does
not condemn sound philosophy,
but that kind of it which had no
foundation in truth; and, being
formed merely from imagination,
aided by the pride of human
reason, was supported by
tradition; that is, by the
affirmation of the inventors,
handed down from one to another.
Of this kind was the philosophy
of the Platonists concerning
demons, whom they represented as
carrying men’s prayers to God,
and as bringing back from God
the blessings prayed for. They
spake of them likewise as
governing the elements and all
human affairs, by a sort of
independent power.” It seems
some teachers had crept in among
the Christians at Colosse,
either of Gentile or Jewish
extraction, who endeavoured to
blend deceits of this kind with
the gospel of Christ, and that
this is what the apostle here
condemns; 1st, Because it was
empty and deceitful, promising
wisdom, but giving none. 2d,
Because it was grounded, not on
truth, or solid reason, but on
the vain and false traditions of
men. 3d, Because, as the apostle
here says, it was after the
rudiments, στοιχεια, the
elements, of the world — Such as
the Jewish ceremonies, or the
pagan superstitions. The
ceremonies of the Mosaic law
have this appellation,
(Galatians 4:3,) being but a
carnal worship in comparison of
the more spiritual ordinances of
the gospel; and but an
elementary kind of institution,
(like the alphabet to children,
or the first principles of
science,) fitted to the infancy
of the church; and not after
Christ — According to his
institution and doctrine, but
tending to withdraw the heart
from him.
Verse 9-10
Colossians 2:9-10. For in him
dwelleth — Inhabiteth, κατοικει,
continually abideth; all the
fulness of the Godhead —
Believers may be filled with all
the fulness of God, Ephesians
3:19; but in Christ dwelleth all
the fulness of the Godhead, the
most full Godhead, Colossians
1:19; bodily — Really,
substantially. The very
substance of God, if one might
so speak, dwells in Christ in
the most full sense. “It is
plain,” says Dr. Doddridge,
“that the Godhead is an
anglicism equivalent to Deity.
Compare Acts 17:29. And I cannot
think that these wonderful words
are intended merely to signify
that God hath lodged in the
hands of Christ a fulness of
gifts, to be conferred upon men,
as if the passage were merely
parallel to John 1:16-17, as Mr.
Pierce explains it; while
Socinus sinks it yet lower, as
if it only referred to his
complete knowledge of the divine
will. I assuredly believe, that
as it contains an evident
allusion to the Shechinah, in
which God dwelt, so it
ultimately refers to the
adorable mystery of the union of
the divine and human natures in
the person of the glorious
Emmanuel, which makes him such
an object of our hope and
confidence, as the most exalted
creature, with the most glorious
endowments, could never of
himself be.” And ye are complete
in him — You have in and from
him every thing necessary to
your salvation, all the wisdom
and knowledge, the righteousness
and strength, the holiness,
support, and comfort that you
stand in need of, to enable you
to glorify God on earth, and to
prepare you for being glorified
with him in heaven. But the
original expression, εν αυτω
πεπληρωμενοι, is literally, ye
are filled by him. See on John
1:16. Christ is filled with God,
and ye are filled with, or by,
Christ. The fulness of Christ
overflows his church, Psalms
133:3. He is originally full,
but our fulness is derived from
him. Who is the head of all
principality and power — Of
angels as well as men. Not from
angels, therefore, but from
their Head, are we to ask
whatever we stand in need of.
The supremacy of Christ over all
created beings, is asserted in
many other passages of
Scripture. See the margin. A
doctrine this which affords the
greatest consolation to the
people of God, as it assures
them that nothing befalls them
without his permission, and that
all things shall work together
for their good.
Verse 11-12
Colossians 2:11-12. In whom also
ye are circumcised — Ye have
received the spiritual blessings
signified of old by
circumcision; with the
circumcision made without hands
— Namely, an internal, spiritual
circumcision; in putting off —
Not a little skin, but the whole
body of the sins of the flesh —
All the sins proceeding from
your corrupt nature; by the
circumcision of Christ — The
circumcision of the heart, which
Christ requires and effects.
Buried with him, &c. — That is,
which he wrought in you when you
were, as it were, buried with
him in baptism — The ancient
manner of baptizing by immersion
is as manifestly alluded to
here, as the other manner of
baptizing by sprinkling, or
pouring of water, is, Hebrews
10:22. But no stress is laid on
the age of the baptized, or the
manner of performing it, in one
or the other place; but only on
our being quickened, or renewed,
through the powerful operation
of his Spirit in the soul, which
we cannot but know assuredly, if
we really are so: and if we do
not experience this, our baptism
has not answered the end of its
institution. Wherein — Or
rather, by which; ye are risen
with him — From the death of
sin, to the life of
righteousness; through the faith
of the operation of God — Faith
wrought in you by God: see on
Ephesians 2:8; or, through faith
in the energy of God, as some
render δια της πιστεως της
ενεργειας του θεου; who raised
him from the dead — They who put
this latter sense upon the
passage explain it thus: “The
circumcision which Christ
performs being accomplished by
the influence of the doctrines
of the gospel upon the minds of
believers, and their belief of
these doctrines being founded on
their belief of the resurrection
of Christ, their belief of that
great miracle is justly
represented as the means whereby
they are made new creatures.”
The doctrines of the gospel,
however, will produce no such
effect, unless they be
accompanied by the influence of
the Holy Spirit.
Verses 13-15
Colossians 2:13-15. And you —
Believing Gentiles; being
formerly dead in your sins —
Under the guilt and power of
your sins, (see on Ephesians
2:1; Ephesians 2:5,) and the
uncircumcision of your flesh —
Your corrupt and unrenewed
nature, your uncircumcised heart
and affections; hath he — God
the Father; quickened — Brought
you out of that state by
infusing into you spiritual
life: together with him —
Through the merit of Christ’s
death, and in conformity to his
resurrection; having forgiven
you all trespasses — In
consequence of his having atoned
for them. Blotting out the
handwriting — Where a debt is
contracted, it is usually
testified by some handwriting.
And when the debt is forgiven,
the handwriting is destroyed,
either by blotting it out,
taking it away, or tearing it.
The apostle expresses in all
these three ways God’s
destroying the handwriting which
was contrary to us. And perhaps,
as Macknight thinks, in the
expression, nailing it to the
cross, he alludes to “an ancient
custom of abrogating laws, by
driving a nail through the
tables on which they were
written, and hung up to public
view.” The word δογματα, here
rendered ordinances, is used by
the LXX., Ezekiel 20:26, for the
rites of the ceremonial law, as
it is also Ephesians 2:15, and
that law is evidently here
meant. St. Paul says, it was
against us; meaning, 1st, The
Jews, who had been under an
obligation to fulfil it, and
whose guilt and liableness to
punishment it testified. It was
also, 2d, Against and contrary
to the Gentiles, as being a
middle wall of partition,
hindering them from coming to
God, and putting an enmity
between them and the Jews. This
Christ took away by abolishing
the obligation of it, and
admitting the believing Gentiles
to be fellow-heirs with the
believing Jews, of the promises
and blessings of the gospel,
without their becoming subject
to it. See notes on Ephesians
2:14-18. And having spoiled
principalities and powers — The
evil angels, of their usurped
dominion, in consequence of his
having conquered them. For in
the original expression,
απεκδυσαμενος, which signifies
having stripped off, there is an
allusion to the ancient custom
of victors, who were wont to
strip the vanquished of their
arms and clothes. Hence the word
is taken to signify spoiling in
general. That the evil angels
are here said to be spoiled by
Christ’s dying on the cross,
seems evident from what we read
elsewhere. Christ, speaking of
his death, said to his
disciples, (John 12:31,) Now
shall, ο αρχων, the prince, or
ruler, of this world be cast
out; and, John 16:11, ο αρχων,
the prince of this world is
judged. See also Ephesians 4:8.
And by spoiling them we may
understand, with Hammond, Whitby,
and others, the destruction of
idolatry, the silencing the
heathen oracles, and the
banishing of those grievous
superstitions, with which
mankind had been so long
oppressed. Some others, however,
by these principalities and
powers understand the Jewish
rulers and great men, who in the
first age grievously persecuted
the disciples of Christ. But
this interpretation seems
unnatural, and certainly was not
verified by fact at the time
when the apostle wrote this
epistle, the Jewish sanhedrim
and rulers being still in power.
He — God the Father; made a show
of them openly — Before all the
hosts of hell and heaven;
triumphing over them in or by it
— Even that cross whereby they
hoped to have triumphed over
him, God turning their counsels
against themselves, and ruining
their empire by that death of
his Son which they had been so
eager to accomplish. Or the
clause may be rendered,
triumphing over them in him; in
Christ. By turning the heathen
from the power of Satan to God,
it was shown that the evil
spirits, who formerly ruled
them, were vanquished and
stripped of their power. It is
supposed, that in this and the
preceding clause there is an
allusion to the Roman triumphs,
of which see on 2 Corinthians
2:14; and that St. Paul
represents Christ himself, or
his apostles, as riding in
triumph through the world, with
the evil spirits following the
triumphant car in chains, and
exposed to public view as
vanquished enemies.
Verse 16-17
Colossians 2:16-17. Let no man,
therefore, &c. — Seeing these
things are so, and the
ceremonial law is now abolished,
let no one, who is in a bigoted
manner attached to it, judge and
condemn you Gentile Christians;
that is, regard none who judge
you, in regard to the use of
meat or drink — Forbidden by it;
or in respect of a holyday — η
εν μερει εοπτης, in respect of a
festival. The festivals,
distinguished from new moons and
sabbaths, meant days of
rejoicing annually observed. Of
these some were enjoined in the
law, others by human authority,
such as those instituted in
commemoration of the deliverance
of the Jews by Esther, and of
the purification of the temple
by Judas Maccabeus. Or the new
moon, or the sabbath days — The
weekly Jewish sabbaths; which
are but a lifeless shadow
emblematical of good things to
come — Intended to lead men’s
minds to spiritual and
evangelical blessings. But the
body — Of those shadows; is of
Christ — The substance of them
is exhibited in the gospel of
Christ, in whom they all centre;
and having the latter, we need
not be solicitous about the
former. “The whole of the
ceremonial law of Moses being
abrogated by Christ, (Colossians
2:14,) Christians are under no
obligation to observe any of the
Jewish holydays, not even the
seventh-day sabbath. Wherefore,
if any teacher made the
observance of the seventh day a
necessary duty, the Colossians
were to resist him. But though
the brethren in the first age
paid no regard to the Jewish
seventh-day sabbath, they set
apart the first day of the week
for public worship, and for
commemorating the death and
resurrection of their Master, by
eating his supper on that day;
also for the private exercises
of devotion. This they did,
either by the precept or by the
example of the apostles, and not
by virtue of any injunction in
the law of Moses. Besides, they
did not sanctify the first day
of the week in the Jewish
manner, by a total abstinence
from bodily labour of every
kind. That practice was
condemned by the council of
Laodicea, as Judaizing.” —
Macknight.
Verse 18-19
Colossians 2:18-19. Let no man
beguile you of your reward — Of
future glory, however eagerly or
artfully he may attempt it.
According to Pierce, who pleads
the authority of Demosthenes,
the word καταβραβευετω, here
rendered beguile you of your
reward, should be translated
condemn you: others, because the
verb βραβευω, without the
preposition, is translated to
rule, (Colossians 3:15,) are of
opinion that the expression may
be translated enslave you. But
as the original word comes from
βραβειον, a reward, the
compounded verb certainly more
properly signifies to hinder a
reward from being bestowed, an
evil which the worshipping of
angels, here guarded against, as
more powerful mediators than
Christ, would have occasioned.
For if on any pretence these
Colossian believers had forsaken
Christ, and attached themselves
to angels, they must have lost
the whole benefit of Christ’s
mediation. In a voluntary
humility — θελων εν
ταπεινοφροσυνη, an expression
which Whitby renders, pleasing
himself in his humility; or
affecting humility, and so not
addressing God immediately, but
only by the mediation of angels.
In proof of which
interpretation, the same author
refers to several passages of
the LXX., in which the word θελω
means to be pleased with, or to
delight in, a person or thing:
there are also passages in the
New Testament in which the word
seems to bear the same meaning.
See Matthew 20:26-27; Mark
12:38. And worshipping of angels
— It evidently appears, from
several passages in Philo, to
have been the opinion of that
learned Jew, that angels were
messengers who presented our
prayers to God, as well as
brought down his favours to us.
He represents this view of the
matter as most humble and
reverential, and there is no
doubt but it prevailed among
other Jews. See Tobit 11:14;
Tobit 12:12; Tobit 12:15. It was
undoubtedly because the Jews
entertained so great a respect
for angels, on account of their
supposed agency in human
affairs, that the apostle, in
this epistle, and in that to the
Hebrews, took so much pains to
show that the Son of God is
greater than all angels. It is
justly remarked by Bishop
Burnet, that had it been the
apostle’s intention to give the
least encouragement to any
religious addresses to saints
and angels, this would have been
a very natural occasion of
introducing the subject, and
adjusting its proper boundaries.
Intruding into things which he
hath not seen — With great
presumption, and pretending to
discover wonderful secrets,
relating to their various ranks,
subordinations, and offices.
“The apostle’s meaning,” says
Macknight, “is, that the false
teachers, of whom he speaks,
presumptuously penetrated into
the secrets of the invisible
world, and talked of them with
an air of certainty, without
having any knowledge of the
things which they affirmed;
particularly that the angels
intercede with God for men, and
that to worship them is
acceptable to God.” Vainly
puffed up by his fleshly — His
corrupt and carnal; mind — With
the conceit of things which it
is impossible he should
understand, and a desire of
introducing novelties into
religion. And not holding the
Head — Not adhering to, and
relying on Christ, the Head of
his church, by whom all the true
members of it are not only
guided and governed, but from
whom, having spiritual
nourishment ministered by joints
and bands — By various means of
instruction and grace, or by the
several talents and gifts of its
members, employed for the good
of the whole; and knit together
— By love and mutual sympathy;
increaseth — In knowledge,
holiness, strength, stability,
and usefulness; with the
increase of God — That increase
which comes from him, is
approved by him, and tends to
his glory. What the apostle here
says against the worshipping of
angels, concludes equally
against the worshipping of
saints. Indeed, it is absurd to
suppose that any being can be a
proper object of worship, which
is not both omniscient and
omnipresent, which certainly
neither angels nor saints are.
It is a just remark of a
judicious divine, that the
apostle’s exhortation in this
verse is a good caution to us to
beware of all refinements in
Christianity, which have any
tendency to derogate from the
authority, office, and honour of
Christ, as Head of the church.
Verses 20-23
Colossians 2:20-23. Wherefore —
The inference begun Colossians
2:16 is continued. A new
inference follows Colossians
3:1. If ye be dead with Christ —
As by receiving the ordinance of
baptism ye profess to be; from
the rudiments, or elements, of
the world — See on Colossians
2:8. From those ceremonies,
which persons among the Gentiles
or the Jews are apt to place so
much dependance on; why, as
though living in the world — In
the manner you formerly did, and
being still influenced by the
spirit of the world, and
associated with worldly people;
are ye subject to ordinances —
To mere human institutions,
heathen or Jewish? Why receive
ye or use ordinances, which
Christ hath not enjoined, and
from which he hath made his
followers free? Or the sense may
be, Since you professed
yourselves at your baptism to be
spiritually dead with Christ,
and by his death to be freed
even from the ceremonies of the
law, (though of God’s own
institution,) why should you
submit to superstitious rites
and ordinances of the like kind
invented by men? Touch not — Any
unclean thing; taste not — Any
forbidden meat; handle not — Any
consecrated vessel. Most
commentators suppose that the
Jewish ceremonies only are here
referred to, and that this was
directed to the Jewish converts
at Colosse: but “as I have no
doubt,” says Macknight, “that it
was intended for the Gentiles, I
think the ordinances of which
the apostle speaks were the
rules of the Pythagoreans
respecting abstinence from
animal food, and of the
Platonists concerning the
worshipping of angels, condemned
Colossians 2:18, which it seems
some of the church at Colosse
had actually begun to follow;
perhaps at the persuasion of the
Judaizing teachers, who wished
to subject them to all the rites
of the law.” Which all are to
perish in the using — All which
things cannot be used, but they
must perish in and by the use of
them, being made merely for the
body, and with it going to
corruption, and having therefore
no further use, no influence on
the mind. The original
expression, however, εις φθοραν
τη αποχρησει, may be rendered,
tend to corruption, in, or by,
the abuse of them; and the word
φθορα being often used by St.
Peter, not for a natural, but a
moral corruption, (see 2 Peter
1:4; 2 Peter 2:12; 2 Peter
2:19,) the meaning of the verse
may be, that when these
ceremonies are observed in
compliance with the commands and
doctrines of men as things
necessary, they corrupt men who
thus abuse them. Thus Doddridge:
“All which things tend to the
corruption of that excellent
religion into which you have the
honour to be initiated, by the
abuse of them, according to the
commandments and doctrines of
mistaken and ill-designing men,
who insist so eagerly upon them,
as if they were essential to
salvation.” Which things indeed
have a show, a pretence, of
wisdom — Of being an excellent
doctrine, or wise institution,
and are, in that view, gravely
insisted upon, especially by the
more rigorous sects; in
will-worship — A worship, or
service, which they themselves
have devised. “The word
εθελοθρησκεια nearly resembles
the phrase found Colossians
2:18, θελων εν θρησκεια,
delighting in the worship. But
it can hardly be literally
translated, so as to express the
same idea. But the meaning is, a
worship of human invention,
consequently performed from
one’s own will.” And in an
affected humility and neglecting
of the body — Greek, αφειδια
σωματος, a not sparing of the
body; namely, by subjecting it
to much mortification, in
denying it many gratifications,
and putting it to many
inconveniences. Not in any
honour — Namely, of the body; or
not of any real value, as τιμη
may be rendered, namely, before
God: to the satisfying of the
flesh — Nor do they, upon the
whole, mortify, but satisfy the
flesh. They indulge man’s
corrupt nature, his self-will,
pride, and desire of being
distinguished from others.
Doddridge reads, to the
dishonourable satisfying of the
flesh; their severity to the
body, rigorous as it seemed,
being no true mortification, nor
tending to dispose the mind to
it. On the contrary, while it
puffed men up with a vain
conceit of their own sanctity,
it might be said rather to
satisfy the flesh, even while it
seemed most to afflict it. |