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Chapter 4:14-18

Commentary On The Epistle To The Colossians

By the Rev. Horace M. Patton

Colossians 4:14-18

 

 

Final Greetings:

vs.14: Luke

One of the essential qualities of a good doctor is compassion. People need to know that their doctor cares. Even if he or she doesn’t know what is wrong or isn’t sure what to do, real concern is always a doctor’s good medicine. Doctor Luke was a person of compassion.

Although we know few facts of his life, Luke has left us a strong impression of himself by what he wrote. In his Gospel, he emphasizes Jesus Christ’s compassion. He vividly recorded both the power demonstrated by Christ’s life and the care with which Christ treated people. Luke highlighted the relationships Jesus had with women. His writing in Acts is full of sharp verbal pictures of real people caught up in the greatest events of history.

Luke was also a doctor. He had a traveling medical practice as Paul’s companion. Since the gospel was often welcomed with whips and stones, the doctor was undoubtedly seldom without patients. Paul deeply appreciated Luke’s skills and his faithfulness.

God also made special use of Luke as the historian of the early church. The details of Luke’s descriptions have been proven accurate. The first words in his Gospel indicate his interest in the truth.

Luke’s compassion reflected his Lord’s. Luke’s skill as a doctor helped Paul. His passion for the facts as he recorded the life of Christ, the spread of the early church, and the lives of Christianity’s ambassadors gives us dependable sources for the basis of our faith. He accomplished all this while staying out of the spotlight. Perhaps his greatest example is the challenge to greatness even when we are not the center of attention.

Lessons from his life:

1) The words we leave behind will be a lasting picture of who we are.

2) Even the most successful person needs the personal care of others.

3) Excellence is shown by how we  do our work when no one is noticing.

 

vs.15:

The early Christians often met in homes. Church buildings were not common until the third century.

vs.16:

It is possible that there was a special letter to the Laodiceans, of which we have no record today. Paul wrote several letters that have been lost.

vs.17:

Paul’s letter to Philemon is also   addressed to Archippus (Philemon 2). Paul called him a “fellow soldier.” He may have been a Roman soldier who had become a member of the Colossian church, or he may have been Philemon’s son.

Paul encouraged Archippus to make sure that he completed the work he had received in the Lord. There are many ways for us to leave our work unfinished. We can easily get sidetracked morally; we can become exhausted and stop; we can get mad and quit; or we can let it slide and leave it up to others. We should see to it that we finish God’s assignments, completing the work we have received.

vs.18:

Paul usually dictated his letters to a scribe, and then often ended with a short note in his own handwriting (see also 1 Corinthians 16:21; Galatians 6:11). This assured the recipients that false teachers were not writing letters in Paul’s name. It also gave the letters a personal touch.

To understand the letter to the Colossians, we need to know that the church was facing pressure from a heresy that promised deeper spiritual life through secret knowledge (an early form of Gnosticism). The false teachers were destroying faith in Christ by undermining Christ’s humanity and His divinity.

Paul makes it clear in Colossians that Christ alone is the source of our spiritual life, the Head of the body of believers. Christ is Lord of both the physical and spiritual worlds. The path to deeper spiritual life is not through religious duties, special knowledge, or secrets; it is only through a clear connection with the Lord Jesus Christ. We must never let anything come between us and our Savior.

(The End)

Life Application Bible and notes copyright c 1988, 1989,1990,1991,1993,1996 by Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.  Wheaton, IL  60189. All rights reserved.

 

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