Colossians 1:11–12 “May you be strengthened with all power, according to his
glorious might, for all endurance and patience with joy, giving thanks to the
Father”.
A natural part of the
Christian life is growing and maturing through the study of Holy Scripture; God’s
Word found in the page of the Bible. In looking at a study in the book of
Colossians, we learn that the essence of the Christian life can be summarized
in many legitimate ways, including forgiveness — the realization that the
Father has forgiven us in Christ and thus requires us to forgive others; holiness
— because we have been set apart as holy through the work of the Savior, we
must put holiness into practice in our lives; and patience — God in His
patience was kind to us and brought us to repentance, so we must bear with the
faults of others and wait patiently for the Lord to fulfill His purposes. Other
summaries could be suggested, but the one we see most clearly in a study of
Colossians is thanksgiving.
The lesson points out that gratitude
envelops Paul’s prayer for the church at Colossae in Colossians 1:3–12, indicating
its fundamental place in the life of the Christian. Thanksgiving, in fact, is the
perpetual attitude of Paul and is to be the disposition of the Christians in
Colossae. He is always giving thanks for the faith, hope, and love of the
believers there. The Colossians, and all other Christians by extension, are
admonished to give thanks for their great salvation in an abundant, overflowing
manner. Such an emphasis on thanksgiving is not surprising, for gratitude must
certainly be a chief virtue of redeemed people since a principal vice of fallen
humanity is an ungrateful disposition toward the Lord for His gifts. Old
covenant Israel perpetually fell into idolatry because they did not remember
the Lord who brought them out of Egypt. They ended up thanking gods, who were
no gods at all, for their redemption. May we never do the same.
Romans 6:23 “For
the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ
Jesus our Lord.”
Reality is that we can live
a Christian life of gratitude only when we recall that everything we have in
Christ is an inheritance. Typically, an inheritance is something that is passed
from the person who earned it to a benefactor who has not worked for it, wholly
at the initiative of the earner. Paul can refer to our salvation as an
inheritance because it is something that Jesus earned for us and that we do not
work for but receive by faith alone. John Chrysostom, an early church father
and bishop of Constantinople in the late fourth century, writes, “For no one
leads a life so good as to be counted worthy of the kingdom, but the whole is
his free gift”.
1 Thessalonians 5:18 “Give
thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for
you.”
The
lesson concludes that it is obviously difficult to follow Paul’s admonition to
give thanks in all circumstances, which is why we need strengthening from on high
to persevere with joy as we thank the Lord. This power comes from the Holy
Spirit, who presently lives within the Christian to remind us of all the
blessings we have in Christ Jesus and of our need to thank Him. Consequently,
no Christian can live a life perpetually void of gratitude. Quite the opposite,
there is a life of gratitude for the love, mercy and grace of God towards us; a
sinner.
Blessings
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