Sunday
Morning Bible Study
March
8, 2009
Introduction
The church in
Colosse was located in the Lycus Valley, in the area we know today as the
nation of Turkey.
One of the interesting things about this letter is the fact that Paul had
never visited Colosse. He is writing to
people, most of whom he has never met personally. The church was started by a man named
Epaphras who probably came to know the Lord through Paul’s ministry while Paul
was staying in Ephesus, about 100 miles to the west of Colosse.
(Col 1:3-8 NKJV) We give thanks to the God and Father of our
Lord Jesus Christ, praying always for you, {4} since we heard of your faith in
Christ Jesus and of your love for all the saints; {5} because of the hope which
is laid up for you in heaven, of which you heard before in the word of the
truth of the gospel, {6} which has come to you, as it has also in all the
world, and is bringing forth fruit, as it is also among you since the day you
heard and knew the grace of God in truth; {7} as you also learned from
Epaphras, our dear fellow servant, who is a faithful minister of Christ on your
behalf, {8} who also declared to us your love in the Spirit.
:9 For this reason we also, since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray for you,
and to ask
cease – pauo –to restrain a thing or person from
something
The verb is a “present” tense, meaning that Paul continually works at not
allowing anything to restrain him from prayer.
to pray
– proseuchomai – to offer prayers; continual
praying.
ask – aiteo – to ask, beg, crave, desire;
continual asking
Paul then tells us five things that he has been praying for the church in
Colosse. You could circle the verbs in
your Bible to see how these five things are divided up:
1. To be filled with the knowledge of God’s will
(vs. 9)
2. To walk worthy of the Lord (vs. 10)
3. To be fruitful in every good work (vs. 10)
4. To be increasing in their knowledge of God
(vs. 10)
5. To be strengthened for endurance and patience
(vs. 11)
:9 that you may be
filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual
understanding;
be filled
– pleroo – to fill to the full
Paul doesn’t want the Colossians to just have a taste of God’s will, He wants them to be filled with it.
the knowledge
– epignosis – precise and correct
knowledge; more thorough knowledge; knowledge based on experience
will – thelema – will, choice, inclination,
desire, pleasure
What is God’s
will?
(1 Tim
2:3-4 KJV) For this is good and
acceptable in the sight of God our Savior; {4} Who will
have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the truth.
In the Greek Paul uses the same word as here – it is God’s will that you be
saved.
What does it
mean to be saved?
It means to be saved from the penalty of your sins.
You and I have a big problem. Our sin has separated us from God. Our sin keeps us from knowing God. Our sin will one day be judged by God.
But God has a way out.
God sent His
Son Jesus to take the judgment for our sins.
Jesus died on a cross to be a sacrifice for our sins.
God now offers to us forgiveness and eternal life. He will remove the thing that blocks us from
knowing God if we will put our life into His hands.
all wisdom
– sophia – wisdom
Wisdom is not just knowing facts, but knowing what to do with those facts.
It’s not the
person who can win at a quiz show; it’s a person who does the right things in life.
spiritual
– pneumatikos – relating to the human
spirit or the Holy Spirit
understanding
– sunesis – a running together, critical
understanding
It’s a good thing to pray for
people to know God’s will, even better to know by experience what God’s will
is.
Sometimes we can make God’s will out to be a formula – you put a nickel
into God’s “will machine” and you always get the same result.
But sometimes that lacks wisdom and spiritual understanding.
For example – some people will tell you that since God loves you, that God’s will is always
for you to be healthy,
wealthy, and without any trouble in life.
When difficult times come into your life, they will tell you to “rebuke
the devil” and that you must be out of God’s will. The problem is that this isn’t very wise and
it certainly lacks a true sense of spiritually critical thinking.
Paul writes,
(2 Cor 4:16-18
NKJV) Therefore we do not lose heart.
Even though our outward man is perishing, yet the inward man is being renewed
day by day. {17} For our
light affliction, which is but for a moment, is working for us a far more exceeding
and eternal weight of glory, {18}
while we do not look at the things which are seen, but at the things
which are not seen. For the things which are seen are temporary, but the things
which are not seen are eternal.
James wrote,
(James 1:2-4 NKJV) My brethren, count it all joy when you fall
into various trials, {3} knowing that the testing of your faith produces
patience. {4} But let patience have its perfect work, that you may be perfect
and complete, lacking nothing.
It sounds to me that Paul understood that sometimes God’s will involves difficulty. In fact, sometimes that difficulty is what
helps you grow and mature.
:10 that you may walk
worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing Him,
walk – peripateo (“around” + “to tread”) – to
live your life
worthy –
axios – suitably, in a manner worthy
of
from – axios –
weighing, having weight, having the weight of another thing of like value,
worth as much; befitting, congruous, corresponding to a thing; of one who has
merited anything worthy
pleasing
– areskeia – desire to please; literally,
“unto all pleasing”
What does it mean to walk in a way that is worthy of God and is pleasing to
Him?
Paul gives us one way this happens:
(1 Th 4:1-3 NKJV) Finally then, brethren, we urge and exhort in the Lord Jesus
that you should abound more and more, just as you received from us how you
ought to walk and to please God; {2} for you know what
commandments we gave you through the Lord Jesus. {3} For this is the will of God, your
sanctification: that you should abstain from sexual immorality;
One of the ways we may dishonor God is through sexual immorality – which is
any kind of sex outside of
marriage.
This certainly isn’t the way our world thinks today – movies and TV seem to
give you the impression that it doesn’t make any difference whether you are
married or not, that sex is the thing that we all live for. But God’s whole plan was for sex to be a part
of a committed relationship, marriage, where two people enter into a covenant
of faithfulness to each other.
:10 being fruitful in every good work
Paul doesn’t pray for them just to do good works, but for them to be fruitful in their good
works.
Sometimes we can get caught into just doing the same thing over and over
again and not even being interested in whether or not there are results.
We do these things because “that’s the way it’s always been done”.
Paul’s prayer is not that they just stay busy, but that their good works
would produce fruit, results.
Sometimes we do good things, right things, without immediate results. We want to stay faithful and keep doing what
God wants us to do, and be willing to wait patiently for the harvest.
:10 and increasing in the knowledge of God;
increasing
– auxano – to cause to grow, become
greater; “continually increasing”
Often the word is used to describe an organic, natural kind of
growth. The lilies of the field “grow”
(Mat. 6:28), a mustard seed grows into a tall plant (Luke 13:19), a child grows
to be a man (Luke 1:80).
the knowledge
– epignosis – precise and correct
knowledge; a fuller, clearer, more thorough knowledge; knowledge based on
experience
Back in verse 9, the issue was the knowledge of God’s will. Here the issue is the knowledge of God.
This isn’t just facts about God, but knowledge based on experience – in
other words, growing in
your relationship with God.
Don’t stagnate in your walk with God.
If you think you’ve learned all that can be learned about God, you’ve
stopped way too short.
When you think you’re at the point where now you finally understand the
Bible, you’ve only run the
first lap of the race.
:11 strengthened with
all might, according to His glorious power, for all patience and longsuffering
with joy;
might – dunamis – strength, power, ability
This word is based on a simple Greek word (dunamai) that is usually translated “to be able” as in “I am able to scratch my nose”
or “I am not able to flap my arms and fly”
This is that famous word used to describe what the Holy Spirit does for us:
(Acts 1:8
NKJV) "But you shall receive power when the Holy
Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be witnesses to Me in Jerusalem, and in
all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth."
When we open ourselves up to the work of the Holy Spirit and allow Him to
fill our lives, He gives us “power”, “might”, or even more important “ability”.
We often think of the Holy Spirit’s work as giving us “dynamite” power (a
related word), but it’s probably better to think of it as “dynamic” power, that
the Holy Spirit makes you “able”. In Acts 1:8, He makes us able to be
witnesses.
If we’re thinking about “dynamite” with the Holy Spirit,
then we sit around waiting for the 10,000 volt jolt to give us power.
But in truth it’s more like, “Hey, I am ABLE to do this!”
strengthened
– dunamoo – to make strong; this too
is a similar word to “might”
We could say that Paul is praying for them to be, “powered with all power”,
or “strengthened with all strength”, or perhaps even better “enabled with all
ability”
according to
– the word speaks of doing something with the same measure – Paul prays
that the Colossians would be strengthened at the same level as God’s power.
glorious
– doxa – splendor, brightness
power – kratos – force, strength; might;
dominion
I thought it was interesting to see how often these two words were found together: power and
glory. Five other times, all used to
describe who God is:
1Pe 5:11 To Him [be] the glory and the dominion forever and ever. Amen.
Jude 1:25 To God our Savior, Who alone is
wise, [Be] glory and majesty, Dominion and power, Both now and
forever. Amen.
Re 1:6 and has made us kings and priests
to His God and Father, to Him [be] glory
and dominion forever and ever. Amen.
(Rev 5:13) And every creature which is in heaven and on
the earth and under the earth and such as are in the sea, and all that are in
them, I heard saying: "Blessing and honor and glory
and power Be to Him who sits on the
throne, And to the Lamb, forever and ever!"
He’s not praying for them to be strengthened according to the power of Pee-Wee Herman. He’s praying for a bigger measure of power,
something even bigger than our governor (Mr. Schwarzenegger), God’s Power.
There’s a goal to this power that we need in our lives. It’s not power to part oceans or move
mountains. It’s something much more
practical.
patience
– hupomone (“under” + “to remain”) –
steadfastness, constancy, endurance; the guy who does not stop doing the right
thing for God even when life gets hardest.
Some of you are going through difficult times right now.
Some are struggling with the economic problems our nation has – people out
of work, businesses struggling.
Some are struggling with things like health issues.
We need patience, endurance, the ability to keep walking with the Lord in
those difficult times.
all patience – not just some patience, but patience
in all things.
longsuffering
– makrothumia (“long” + “burning”) –
patience, endurance, perseverance
While hupmone speaks of patience
in difficult circumstances, this deals with patience with difficult people.
Some of you have very difficult people in your life. It may be someone at work who is riding
you. It may be a marriage or
relationship that is struggling right now.
It may be a child who is being rebellious.
We need “longsuffering”.
joy – it
is one thing to put up with difficult people, but to do it with “joy” too? I’d say that’s a great reason to need God’s
power!
Don’t forget that all this deep things are inside Paul’s prayer for the
Colossians.
Learning
about prayer
1. It starts with thanks
You might not have noticed, but the prayer we’ve been looking at actually
started back in verse 3:
(Col 1:3
NKJV) We give thanks to the God and
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ…
And the prayer actually continues into verse 12:
(Col 1:12
NKJV) giving thanks to the Father …
When you begin to grow in prayer, you may find yourself learning to ask
more and more things of God. That’s not
a bad thing – but don’t forget that healthy prayer is not just about asking,
it’s about acknowledging God, giving Him praise, and especially coming to Him
with a heart of thanksgiving.
(Psa 100:4
NKJV) Enter into His gates with
thanksgiving, And into His courts with praise. Be thankful to Him, and bless
His name.
Thanksgiving is the “gate”
into God’s presence. It’s the best way
to approach God.
In our daily Bible reading, we’re
going to get sick of all the complaining that the Israelites did in the
wilderness.
The opposite of complaining is thanks.
When Jesus healed the ten lepers,
there was only one who bothered to come back and say “thanks”.
Paul tells us that prayer with thanksgiving is the remedy to anxiety. It’s the way we receive God’s peace.
(Phil 4:6-7
NKJV) Be anxious for nothing, but in
everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving,
let your requests be made known to God; {7} and the peace
of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds
through Christ Jesus.
I’ve found that simply reciting my “list” to God doesn’t do much to remove
anxiety.
To pray with thanksgiving requires an element of faith, I believe that God
is going to answer my prayers the right way, I’m able to put the issue in God’s
hands, and I find His peace.
2. Regular discipline
(Col
1:3 NKJV) … praying always for you,
(Col
1:9 NKJV) …since the day we heard it, do
not cease to pray for you…
Paul drops a subtle hint that he was a man of prayer.
The man God uses is a
man of prayer – there are no exceptions, no skimping
Paul knew that prayer was vital to being useful to the Lord.
Last week we looked at some qualities of the man that started the church in
Colosse, Epaphras.
One of the things I left out of last week’s list of things in Epaphras’
life that God used was the element of prayer.
(Col 4:12 NKJV) Epaphras, who is one of you, a bondservant of
Christ, greets you, always laboring
fervently for you in prayers, that you may stand perfect and complete in
all the will of God.
Brothers and sisters – if you really want God to be at work in your life,
you must learn to spend time with God in prayer.
But I warn you – it’s not easy.
There’s something in me that just hates to pray. It’s a lot easier to read my Bible every day
than it is to open up my prayer list and intercede. I am learning that I must
grow in prayer.
3. Significant content
Are you impressed by the things that Paul prayed for? I am.
For years when I’ve tried to develop a regular prayer life, my prayers
consisted of dealing with simple, earthly, physical issues.
Praying for somebody to be healed. Praying for
somebody to get a job.
I’m not saying
that those kinds of things are wrong, but stack those kinds of things up
against what Paul prays for, and my requests look kind of shallow. I might not be praying the best thing for my
loved one.
Pray for yourself
– I would challenge you to pick one of these items Paul prayed for and pray it
for yourself once a day
for a month.
It will change you.
Pray for others
– you ought to have a few people that you are willing to commit to pray for
every day.
Is there a person in your life that would benefit from you praying one of
these things for them every day for a month?
Knowing God’s
will. Walking worthy. Being fruitful. Knowing God better. Strengthened for patience. Pick one.
And pray.