COLOSSIANS CHAPTER 3.
VIEW
FOOTNOTES
The Affections of the Christians Set on Things Above. Col. 3, 1-4.
V.1.
If
ye, then, be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above,
where Christ
sitteth on the right hand of God. V.2. Set your
affection on things above, not on things on the earth. V.3.
For ye are dead, and your life is hid
with Christ in God. V.4. When Christ,
who is our Life, shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him in
glory. As
the Bible-student will note, the similarity between Colossians and
Ephesians is
everywhere apparent, but nowhere more pronounced than in this chapter.
The
apostle here holds out before the Christians the highest inducement
that he
could possibly bring: If, then (as is the case), you were raised with
Christ,
seek those things that are above, where Christ is sitting at the right
hand of
God. That we Christians have been raised with Christ, that we have
risen
together with Him, that we have been made partakers of His resurrection
and its
blessings in our conversion, that is the principal and most profound
basis of
all our Christian life. “For, as St. Paul here says, the excellent work
and
supreme treasure of the resurrection of Christ shall not be a useless,
inefficient, and powerless talk or thought, as a dead picture hewn in
stone or
painted on paper, but a power and might of a kind to work a
resurrection also in
us through faith; which he calls ‘rising with Christ,’ that is, to be
dead
to sins, to be torn out of the power of death and hell, and to have
comfort and
life in Christ.” 5) Having become partakers of Christ’s life, of the
fruits
of His resurrection, having entered into the most intimate fellowship
with Him,
it follows that we will have only one thing in mind, that we will set
our
thoughts upon the things that are above. Christians will at all times
strive
after the possession of the invisible, eternal, holy, heavenly world of
God, on
the eternal blessings which the exalted Christ has prepared for them in
the
mansions above. They will heed the admonition: Set your mind on the
things
above, not on those on the earth. All our thinking, all our desiring,
all our
loving should be directed heavenward. The transitory things of this
world should
engage our attention only inasmuch as we are stewards of the gifts of
God for
the space of this short life. But Christians cannot set their
affections upon
the treasures, upon the joys, upon the honors of this world. The things
of this
world are at best only a means to an end, namely, to support this
earthly,
physical life, to enable us to perform the work which was given us by
the Lord
to perform. In the right use of the earthly things entrusted to us, we
really
mind and seek heavenly things; with their attainment our hearts are
engrossed.
Paul
substantiates his admonition: For you died, and your life is hid with
Christ in
God. When the Lord converted us through the power of His Word, He gave
us
complete fellowship with Christ. So we Christians died to the world and
to
earthly, transitory things; we renounced the devil and all his works
and all his
pomp. At the same time we entered into the communion of Christ’s
wonderful
life. We now enjoy the mysterious union with Christ which is concealed
with Him
in God. This life, which belongs to the depth of our inward
experiences, may be
foolishness in the eyes of the foolish children of this world, but to
us
Christians it is a divine conviction, a certain experience. At the same
time, by
our union with Christ, we are united in fellowship with God the Father
Himself.
The apostle thus has the strongest reason for speaking so emphatically.
“To
such earthly behavior, he means to say, after which the heathen and
unbelievers
seek that put the Word of God out of their mind entirely and permit
themselves
to be led and driven by the devil, you must be dead, proving thereby
that the
resurrection of Christ in you is not vain words, but living power,
which also
give evidence in you that you also have risen and now live differently
than
before, namely, according to God’s will and Word; which is called a
divine,
heavenly life.” 6)
Eventually
this life will no longer be hidden: When Christ shall appear, who is
your Life,
then you also with Him will be manifested in glory. Christ, our Savior,
is our
Life; He is at the same time both Possessor and Source of all true
life,
spiritual and eternal. The life of our Redeemer is our life, it was
transmitted
to us by His gracious power; He Himself is the essence of our life, all
the
manifestations of spiritual life in us are due to His life in us. Cp.
Rom. 6,
10. 11; Gal. 2, 19. 20. Christ will be manifested on the great day of
His
judgment, He will appear before all the world in the majesty of His
glory. And
then the days of humility will be past, then the time of the hidden
life will be
ended, then we Christians shall also be manifested with Him in glory,
to the
astonishment of the unbelievers, that considered us more or less
harmless or
harmful fools with our belief in the risen Christ; we shall be taken
out of our
disgrace and obscurity to become partakers of His eternal state of
blessedness.
Putting Off the Old Man and Putting On the New. Col. 3, 5-11.
V.5.
Mortify, therefore, your members
which are upon the earth: fornication, uncleanness, inordinate
affection, evil
concupiscence, and covetousness, which is idolatry; v.6.
for which things sake
the wrath of God cometh on the children of disobedience; v.7.
in the which ye also walked some time when ye lived
in them. V.8.
But now ye also put off all these: anger, wrath,
malice, blasphemy,
filthy communication out of your mouth. V.9. Lie not one to an
other, seeing that ye have put off the old man with his deeds, v.10.
and have put on the new man, which is renewed in
knowledge after the
image of Him that created him; v.11.
where there is neither Greek nor
Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, bond nor
free; but
Christ is all and in all. The
apostle here shows how the life of the believers in and with Christ
should be
manifested: Put to death, therefore, your members that are on the
earth:
fornication, uncleanness, lustfulness, evil desire, and covetousness,
which is
idolatry. The apostle here speaks of the members of the body in its
unregenerate
state as servants and instruments of sin, bidding the Christians to put
them to
death in that capacity, by a single decisive act to terminate their
functions in
this respect. Cp. Rom. 6, 13. Among the sins that are performed by the
members
of the body the apostle mentions especially such as were prevalent
among the
heathen in those days, sexual vices: fornication, when people that are
not
husband and wife cohabit as husband and wife; uncleanness, impurity,
the being
addicted to erotic thoughts and acts in one’s own mind and body;
lustfulness,
to desire the gratification of sexual desire outside of holy wedlock;
evil lust,
out of which all the other sins against the Sixth Commandment flow.
With these
sins was often associated that of covetousness, of devising ways and
means for
indulging in lustful passions. Monsters of covetousness have usually
been also
monsters of lust. But covetousness, which kills brotherly love and
hardens the
heart against the gentle working of God’s Holy Spirit, is, as St. Paul
specifically states, idolatry, a gross transgression of the First
Commandment,
Matt. 6, 24. Faith cannot live in a heart which is devoted to Mammon, 1
Tim. 6,
9. 10. And the end is: On account of which things comes the wrath of
God on the
children of disobedience. All these things, all the sins which the
apostle has
mentioned, are under God’s judgment of condemnation; His righteousness
and
holiness demands the punishment of the transgressor by death, eternal
death.
There is, therefore, an alternative held before the Colossians: Either
put to
death the members that perform such deeds, or suffer eternal punishment
on
account of your transgressions. All the children of disobedience that
refuse to
heed the gentle call, the warning admonition of the Lord, are under the
wrath of
God, which will eventually overtake and condemn them.
The
apostle now places the Colossian Christians in direct contrast to the
children
of unbelief and disobedience: in which also you formerly led your lives
when you
lived in these. The moral conduct of all men by nature is subject to
the censure
and condemnation of God. The Colossian Christians also, before their
conversion,
had been habitual transgressors with reference to the one or the other,
or to
all the vices named above. They had been living in these vices; they
represented
the sphere of their conduct, the state in which any one could find
them. Cp.
Rom. 7, 5; Eph. 2, 2.
The
contrast between the converted and unconverted state is stressed still
more: But
now do you also put away all of them: anger, rage, malignity, slander,
abusive
speech out of your mouth. The life of heathendom, of disobedience and
unbelief,
lies behind the Colossian Christians, and yet the apostle addresses
this urgent
admonition to them, since by reason of the Christian’s evil nature the
tendency, the proclivity, toward all these sins is found also in their
hearts. A
Christian’s entire life is a battle against the efforts of the old Adam
to
regain supremacy in his heart. Only a few of the most flagrant offenses
are
named: anger, the settled, continued condition of extreme displeasure
against
one’s neighbor, which is so apt to culminate in hatred; indignation or
rage,
the sudden and passionate outburst which, in a way, is worse than s low
anger,
since the enraged person loses all control over himself; malignity, the
feeling
which causes a person to make a habit of injuring his neighbor;
slander, by
which the neighbor’s good name is dragged into the mire; abusive talk
and
language which reveal the malice of the heart. Even as the finest
garden will be
ruined quickly if the weeds are permitted to gain a foothold, so the
Christian
community life, in home and congregation, will soon be utterly spoiled
if these
sins gain a foothold. And one more sin the apostle adds to the
transgressions of
the mouth which he has enumerated: Lie not to one another. For
Christians to
belie one another, deliberately to pervert the truth in order to work
harm to
their neighbor, is the very opposite of their calling, it cannot be
reconciled
with the life in and with Christ of which they have become partakers.
To lie is
characteristic of the devil’s domain, John 8, 44.
The
apostle now brings the motive for proper Christian conduct from another
point of
view: Seeing you have put off the old man with his practices, and have
put on
the new man that is being renewed toward knowledge, according to the
image of
Him that created him. When they were converted, the Christians put off
the old
man, the old sinful nature, like an old, filthy garment. This putting
off, this
laying aside, included also that of the evil deeds and practices in
which the
old evil nature of man delights, the denying of the flesh with all its
affections and lusts. Cp. Rom. 8, 13; Gal. 5, 24. This was a single
process, it
took place in regeneration; but it is also a continued process, for the
evil
thoughts and desires in the heart, murders, adulteries, fornications,
false
witness, blasphemies, are always seeking to overcome the resistance of
the
Christian and to plunge him again into the filth of the children of
disobedience. The believer, therefore, will at the same time put on the
new man,
the nature which is created by God, a product of His grace, consisting
in
righteousness and holiness in truth, Eph. 4, 24. This new man, this
new,
spiritual nature of the Christian, is continually being renewed. So
long as we
live in the flesh, so long must this process go on without ceasing; we
must be
renewed in knowledge and unto knowledge. We must grow in the knowledge
of God's
Word and will, after the image of God, who wrought the new nature in us
in
conversion. We are not only to be restored to the image of God which
Adam
possessed, but we shall eventually know and see our heavenly Father
face to
face, in everlasting glory and majesty. The more we Christians, by
daily,
prayerful study, penetrate into the wonderful Gospel-message, the more
we
understand the wonderful depth of love which was revealed in Jesus
Christ, the
more the image of God is impressed upon our soul, until finally, in the
light of
the eternal glory, we shall know Him even as we are known, 1 Cor. 13,
12.
In
this
respect, so far as this renewal unto the perfect knowledge is
concerned, the
fact stands out: Where there cannot be Greek and Jew, circumcision and
uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, slave, freeman, but all and in all
Christ.
Cp. Gal. 3, 28. Wherever there are Christians, wherever the new man is
created,
all these distinctions vanish. Whether a person be a Greek, a person
versed in
all the wisdom of this present world, a member of the most advanced and
enlightened nation of the world, or a Jew, priding himself upon his
descent from
Abraham and upon certain outward advantages which his nation enjoyed;
whether a
person is circumcised or uncircumcised: whether a person is a barbarian
or even
a Scythian, the most extreme example of lack of civilization and
culture;
whether a person is a slave and subject to an earthly master, or free
and his
own master before the earthly law, - all these factors have no
influence with
reference to the power of God in the Gospel and with regard to the
standing of
the individual Christians before God. There is no difference: all are
sinners
before the righteous and holy God, all are in need of redemption, for
them all
Christ died on the cross, for them all He obtained a perfect
reconciliation, and
so all Christians are in a state of absolute equality before God. And
Christ is
all and in all. The fullness of all blessings is found in Him, and this
fullness
He transmits, He gives to His members, to the believers, Eph. 1, 23. In
the
Church, as the vessel filled with the fullness of Christ’s grace and
mercy and
with all the gifts which they include, the great union is brought
about, by
virtue of which all man-made distinctions are abrogated and perfect
love and
harmony in Him results. “Christ is the aggregation of all things,
distinctions, prerogatives, blessings, and, moreover, is in all,
dwelling in
all, and SO uniting all in the common element of Himself.”
The Rule of God’s
Peace and Its Effect on Various Stations in Life. Col. 3, 12-25.
The
Christians’ conduct toward one another: V.12. Put
on, therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, bowels of
mercies,
kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, longsuffering, v.13.
forbearing one an other, and forgiving one an other,
if any man have a
quarrel against any; even as Christ forgave you, so also do ye. V.14.
And above all these things, put on charity, which is
the bond of
perfectness. V.15. And
let the peace of God rule in your hearts, to the which also ye are
called in one
body; and be ye thankful. V.16. Let
the Word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom, teaching and
admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs,
singing with
grace in your hearts to the Lord. V.17.
And whatsoever ye do in word or
deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God and
the Father
by Him. The Christians being united
in fellowship in Christ, it behooves them to lead a life in conformity
with the
intimacy and sacredness of that bond, to express in their whole lives
and all
their actions the love which unites them in Christ: Put on, then, as
the elect
of God, saints and beloved, a heart of compassion, kindness,
humbleness,
meekness, longsuffering. These are wonderful titles which the apostle
applies to
the Christians, and his use of them shows that he is an expert in the
art of
evangelical admonition. He calls the believers “elect of God,” thereby
indicating the source and fountain of all the spiritual blessings of
God. God
has chosen the Christians in Christ before the foundation of the world.
According to His counsel of love He has elected certain people out of
the mass
of the redeemed to be holy and blameless before Him in love. Not by
reason of
our merits and works, but out of free grace, according to the good
pleasure of
His will, He has chosen us in Christ. A result of this election is that
we are
holy, cleansed, sanctified by the blood of the Lamb. Christ has borne
the sins
of all men earned forgiveness of sins for them all. The righteousness
of Jesus
is imputed to all that believe on Jesus Christ as their Savior. For the
sake of
Christ and His perfect righteousness they are holy before the face of
God,
without a spot or blemish. And therefore they are finally the beloved
of the
Lord. For the sake of Christ, His beloved Son, the Father loves us, the
fullness
of His good pleasure rests upon us, the complete measure of His love
and mercy.
These facts are the strongest possible inducements toward a holy life
on our
part; they should induce us to put on, to be clothed with, hearts of
sympathy
and compassion toward one another, that this feeling characterize our
entire
behavior toward one another. This term the apostle unfolds by naming
some of the
virtues that are combined with Christian love and compassion: kindness,
a
cordially loving disposition which knows no harshness; humility,
lowliness of
mind, that a Christian always places his own person on a lower level
than that
of all other believers; meekness, mildness over against his brother,
which will
overlook even an insult and knows no such thing as violent rage;
long-suffering,
which not only suffers wrong, but rejects every thought of vengeance
and desires
only the salvation of the sinner.
Just
how these Christian virtues are brought out in practical life the
apostle shows
nest: Forbearing one another and forgiving each other, if any man have
a
complaint against any, even as also Christ forgave you, so also doing
yourselves. Christians should forbear, literally, hold one another up.
No
Christian is perfect as long as he walks in the flesh of this body, and
in spite
of all vigilance blemishes and faults will show. Therefore there must
be such
mutual bearing and helping, with much charitable overlooking of slights
and
injuries, as will bring out the charitable disposition which should
characterize
all believers. Together with this, however, must be found the
willingness to
show mercy, to forgive. It is not only a matter of bearing and
forbearing, but
also of cordial remitting of sins that have happened. The forbearing is
general,
the forgiving is usually a matter between two persons; but in both
respects
there must be a cheerful willingness among the Christians. For they
have herein
the example of Christ, which they must endeavor to emulate and equal.
In the
case of injuries which happen in Christian congregations, we can at the
worst
speak only of complaints on account of insults in comparison with the
unspeakably great mass of guilt which is charged against every man
before God.
And yet, Christ freely gave His holy blood, His divine life, into death
to earn
forgiveness of sins for us. Can there be any question, then, of our
being ready
at all times to forgive a fellow-Christian for any wrong done to us?
The
compelling motive and cause of the Christian’s charitable behavior as
here
outlined is brought out by Paul as a climax of his admonition: But over
all
these things love, which is the bond of perfection. The apostle retains
the
figure of clothing which is put on. The final, most splendid garment,
which
holds all the other virtues together in the heart, is the girdle of
love, of
true, cordial affection for the brethren. Without love all the other
Christian
virtues and works are useless and vain. For love is the bond of
perfection. With
love binding the hearts of all Christians together, the ideal of
Christian
perfection is attained. This love, as Luther writes, causes us
Christians to be
of one mind, of one heart, of one pleasure; it unites rich and poor,
rulers and
subjects, sick and healthy, high and low, highly honored and despised.
This
thought is enlarged in the next sentence: And the peace of Christ rule
in your
hearts, to which you were called in one body, and become thankful.
Christ has
gained for us the reconciliation of the Father, He has established
peace between
us and God. This peace He gives through the Gospel, making us certain
that we
are God’s dear children. This peace, therefore, should rule in our
hearts, be
the governing principle of our lives in love. We should maintain it
over against
the attacks of Satan, the world, and our own flesh; we should hold
firmly to the
conviction that the mercy of God rests upon us. This certainty will
make all
Christian virtues become a habit with us as a matter of fact, for our
hearts
will be filled with the enjoyment of this peace, to which we were
called in
conversion. Thus the fact also that all we Christians together form one
body
will be expressed in our lives. Thus our gratitude toward God, which is
growing
in the same rate as our understanding of the mercy of Christ toward us,
will
always find opportunities to show its appreciation of the divine grace.
The best
proof of the grateful condition of our hearts toward God is that by
which we
show in our entire lives those virtues and works which meet with His
approbation.
As
the means for bringing about this ideal condition among the Christians
St. Paul
names the edification of the Word in teaching and singing: The Word of
Christ,
let it dwell in you richly, in all wisdom teaching and admonishing each
other in
psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, in grace singing in your hearts
to God;
and everything, whatever you do in word and deed, do all in the name of
the Lord
Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through Him. The Word of Christ
is not
only the sum total of His sayings as recorded in the Gospels, but the
entire
Word of God; for of this Christ Himself is the beginning, middle, and
end. The
preaching of sin and grace must dwell, must have its home, among the
Christians.
The Christian religion is not to be a matter of Sunday only or of the
sermon
alone; it should also not merely be an occasional guest in the
Christian homes,
but it should be a member of the household, to he used and consulted
day after
day. The abundant comfort and strength of the Gospel should be used
abundantly,
not only by the pastor in the pulpit and in the homes, but also by
every
individual Christian. It contains the right wisdom and teaches the
right wisdom
for both doctrine and admonition. Our brethren. Without love all the
other
Christian virtues and works are useless and vain. For love is the bond
of
perfection. With love binding the hearts of all Christians together,
the ideal
of Christian perfection is attained. This love, as Luther writes,
causes us
Christians to be of one mind, of one heart, of one pleasure; it unites
rich and
poor, rulers and subjects, sick and healthy, high and low, highly
honored and
despised. This thought is enlarged in the next sentence: And the peace
of Christ
rule in your hearts, to which you were called in one body, and become
thankful.
Christ has gained for us the reconciliation of the Father, He has
established
peace between us and God. This peace He gives through the Gospel,
making us
certain that we are God’s dear children. This peace, therefore, should
rule in
our hearts, be the governing principle of our lives in love. We should
maintain
it over against the attacks of Satan, the world, and our own flesh; we
should
hold firmly to the conviction that the mercy of God rests upon us. This
certainty will make all Christian virtues become a habit with us as a
matter of
fact, for our hearts will be filled with the enjoyment of this peace,
to which
we were called in conversion. Thus the fact also that all we Christians
together
form one body will be expressed in our lives. Thus our gratitude toward
God,
which is growing in the same rate as our understanding of the mercy of
Christ
toward us, will always find opportunities to show its appreciation of
the divine
grace. The best proof of the grateful condition of our hearts toward
God is that
by which we show in our entire lives those virtues and works which meet
with His
approbation. As the means for bringing about this ideal condition among
the
Christians St. Paul names the edification of the Word in teaching and
singing:
The Word of Christ, let it dwell in you richly, in all wisdom teaching
and
admonishing each other in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, in
grace singing
in your hearts to God; and everything, whatever you do in word and
deed, do all
in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through
Him. The
Word of Christ is not only the sum total of His sayings as recorded in
the
Gospels, but the entire Word of God; for of this Christ Himself is the
beginning, middle, and end. The preaching of sin and grace must dwell,
must have
its home, among the Christians. The Christian religion is not to be a
matter of
Sunday only or of the sermon alone; it should also not merely be an
occasional
guest in the Christian homes, but it should be a member of the
household, to he
used and consulted day after day. The abundant comfort and strength of
the
Gospel should be used abundantly, not only by the pastor in the pulpit
and in
the homes, but also by every individual Christian. It contains the
right wisdom
and teaches the right wisdom for both doctrine and admonition. Our constant
endeavor must be not only to grow in knowledge of the way of salvation
and to
teach others, but also mutually to encourage one another to maintain an
unflagging interest in true sanctification. This can be done also by
the use of
psalms, the incomparable poetry of Holy Writ, hymns which are intended
chiefly
for use in church services, and spiritual songs, such as are more
popular in
form and content, but also tell of the wonderful blessings of
God for
our salvation. All this should not be a mere mouth service on the part
of the
believers, but they should, at the same time, sing to God in their
hearts, and
that with grace. The mercy of God is the theme of their grateful
singing, of
their continuous thanksgiving, even when this is not accompanied with a
single
word of their mouths. In most cases, however, the sincere gratitude of
the heart
cannot be retained in silence, but out of the fullness of the heart the
mouth
will sing praises to God,
the Father of all mercy. The apostle’s entire
admonition is therefore fitly summarized in the rule that they do
everything, no
matter what it is, whether it be with words or with deeds, in the name
of the
Lord Jesus, through whom, as our Advocate, all thanks are given to God
the
Father. All our words and
deeds must flow from true faith in Jesus, the Redeemer, and be
spoken and performed to His glory, all our words and actions being expressions
of our thankfullness. 7)
The conduct of Christians in various stations in life: V.18.
Wives,
submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as it is
fit in the Lord. V.19.
Husbands, love your
wives, and be not bitter against
them. V.20. Children,
obey your parents in all things;
for this is well-pleasing unto the Lord. V.21.
Fathers,
provoke not your children to anger, lest they be discouraged. V.22.
Servants,
obey in all things your masters according to
the flesh; not with eye-service, as
men-pleasers, but in
singleness of heart, fearing God. V.23. And
whatsoever ye do, do it heartily,
as to the Lord, and not unto men, v.24. knowing that of the Lord ye shall
receive the reward of the inheritance; for
ye
serve the Lord Christ. V.25. For
he that doeth wrong shall receive
for the wrong
which he hath done; and there is
no respect
of persons. Cp. Eph. 5, 22-6, 8. In giving specific
instructions to individual classes of Christians the apostle addresses
himself
first to
the
wives: Wives, be subject to your husbands, as it
should be in the Lord. The submission of the
wife to the
husband is in agreement with the order of God in creation, 1 Tim. 2,
13, not an
absolute obedience, but one which every Christian wife cheerfully
yields in the
Lord, as it should be. As all Christians willingly acknowledge the
headship of
Christ and gladly obey Him according to His revealed Word,
so Christian wives acknowledge the headship of their husbands and
permit them to
be the leaders in all matters which do not oppose the Word of God. That
nevertheless an ideal marriage can and should be a partnership goes
without
saying.
But
the husband, as the responsible head, also has a specific duty:
Husbands, love
your wives, and be not bitter against them. The leadership, the
headship, of the
husband should be exercised in love, not merely the conjugal love,
which would
at best be subject to great fluctuations, but with the steady,
unwavering
affection, of which he has an example in the love of Christ for the
Church, Eph.
5, 25-33. This love cannot permit bitterness to creep in and spoil the
relationship which the will of God demands. The man is neither master
of his
wife nor slaveholder with respect to her, but the husband, who will
never cause
bitterness to arise in her heart by irritable harshness on his part.
Indifference and neglect on the part of the husband, whether that be
due to the
cares and worries of his work or business or to the changing moods of
the flesh,
cannot be excused.
To
the children the apostle says: Children, obey your parents in all
things, for
this is well-pleasing in the Lord. The phrase “in all things” is
synonymous
with the “in the Lord” of the parallel passage, Eph. 6, 1. The
statement is
purposely general; for parents are the representatives of God over
against their
children, and their authority is that of the Lord. An unwilling,
grumbling
obedience on the part of the children is just as directly against the
letter and
spirit of this admonition as outright disobedience. The Lord wants
willing
hearts, a service on the part of the children which flows from faith
and a
grateful heart toward God, whose gifts the parents are.
But
no less urgent is the apostle’s admonition to the parents: Fathers,
provoke
not your children, lest they be disheartened. This requires a great
deal of
wisdom and patience. For if parents are over severe, unjust, capricious
in the
treatment of their children, if they irritate them by exacting, harsh
commands
and perpetual faultfinding, such a foolish exercise of parental
authority may
easily discourage the children, may break their spirit, may cause them
to lose
all affection and confidence, all pleasure and power for good and
against evil.
The
longest admonition of the series is addressed by Paul to the servants,
in this
case the slaves, probably on account of the incident in which Onesimus
was
involved. He writes: Servants, obey in all things those that are your
masters
according to the flesh, not in eye-service as men-pleasers, but in
singleness of
the heart, fearing the Lord. The statement “in all things” is naturally
modified by the limitation set by God Himself, Acts 5, 29. Slaves are
bound to
yield obedience to their earthly lords; that is the will of God. Their
work
should not be done with acts of eye-service, namely, that they show all
eagerness while the eye of the master rests upon them, and afterwards
idle and
loaf away the time. In that case they would be mere men-pleasers, they
would
consider the performance of their duty to consist only in gaining the
approval
of their masters. A Christian servant will remember that his first duty
is
toward the Lord, that he should strive to please Him, and that he
should
therefore perform his work in singleness of heart and purpose, not with
the
double-dealing which accompanies mere eye-service. A Christian servant
is always
conscious of the presence of God, for whom he has the highest feeling
of
respectful regard. His aim is, above all, to gain the approbation of
his
heavenly Father.
It
follows, then: Whatever you do, do it from the heart as to the Lord and
not to
men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the reward of the
inheritance.
Although Christian servants are in the immediate service of men, as far
as
appearances go, they should know that in reality they are in the
service of God.
All their labor, therefore, must be done heartily and with a right good
will.
And all this should be their willing obedience all the more because
they should
know that the Lord would give them the reward, or recompense, of mercy.
The Lord
will look upon the faithful labor of every servant and every workman as
a
continuous good work for Christ's sake and will reward him accordingly.
In the
inheritance which is promised to them as the children of God the slaves
would
have the full recompense for all their hard labor in the service of
their
masters here on earth.
They
must never forget, therefore: Serve the Lord Christ, for he that does
wrong will
bear what he has done wrong, and there is no respect of persons This is
a
warning from the Law: Every person reaps what he sows. For although the
Christians, and also the Christian slaves, are no longer under the Law
as
believers, they are always in danger, on account of the weakness and
perversity
of their old flesh and evil nature, to yield to sin in some form. In
that case
they must remember that the evildoer must bear the curse and punishment
of his
evil. At the same time, the terrible part of the warning is contained
in the
fact that the wrong done here on earth and enduring for only a few
moments will
be punished with eternal destruction. Obedience and faithfulness is
required of
Christian servants, and those that deliberately transgress in this
respect,
probably with the plea that they have become partakers of the true
Christian
liberty, will find that God will not overlook misdeeds or idleness. It
makes no
difference to Him whether the sinner occupies a high social position in
the
world or is reckoned with the very lowliest of men; He judges the heart.
On
the other hand, therefore, the masters should also heed the warning,
chap. 4,
v.1. Masters, give unto your
servants that which is just and equal, knowing that ye also have a
Master in
heaven. The treatment which any
master accords to those under his authority, and especially to slaves,
should be
determined by justice and equity, not by caprice. Masters should regard
their
slaves, OR their side, as far as they are concerned, as human beings
with
themselves, like themselves. On the social, historical side there may
be a wide
difference in their stations, but by creation all men are equal before
God, and
that fact must never be forgotten. The almighty and just Lord in heaven
will
call every master to account for the treatment accorded those entrusted
to his
authority.
Summary.
The apostle directs the thoughts of his readers heavenward, admonishes
them to
put off the old man, the sinful members on earth, and to put on the new
man with
all the Christian virtues, sustained by a rich use of the Word of God;
he gives
brief regulations to wives and husbands, to children and parents, to
slaves and
masters.