
The Seven Ems
The Messiah or Christ —who is the Son of God— is the King of the kingdom of heaven. Paul tells us that we have been transferred from the world into that kingdom (Col 1:13). A few verses later, Paul puts this fact another way. Christ is the head of the body, the church (Col 1:18). In the companion epistle, Paul tells us that we are members of this body (Eph 5:30). This spiritual body was made possible by the sacrifice of Christ's fleshly body enabling our forgiveness, redemption, and reconciliation (Col 1:14,21-22)
What does it mean to be a Member of Christ’s Church?
When we consider the verses we have just cited, we realise how great a privilege it is to be a member of the church whose Head is Christ. This lesson marries that fact with Paul’s comments in Colossians 3:8-17. Here Paul outlines the characteristics that God expects of members of his kingdom or church.
In our next and final lesson, we will deal more with the privileges and benefits of belonging to Christ. Our present lesson is concerned with the responsibilities of membership and characteristics required.
Col 3:8-9
Once we become Christians and members of the Lord's church, we begin through his power to transform and reform ourselves to become like him. One of the first problems we must tackle is our manner of speech. Paul mentions some of the sorts of speech which must be eliminated:
Note that because these sorts of speech may have become a habit, eliminating them will be a difficult task, but with prayer and determination you will purify your speech. Do not become discouraged.
Col 3:10
Paul says, "...you put off the old self with its evil practices, and have put on the new self who is being renewed...". Then he mentions a new standard by which this renewal is brought about, namely "true knowledge according to the image of the One who created" the new self.
The Christian is not one who lives by his principles more consistently than others do. Many non-Christians have high principles, and live by them faultlessly. Paul himself had done so before he became a Christian (Php 3:5-6). No, a Christian is one who throws away all his former code of conduct, and takes on the principles by which Jesus lived.
We have "true knowledge" of these principles through the gospel, which reveals an "image" of Christ as a pattern or exemplar for us to follow.
Since we have been created as new persons by Christ, it is fitting that we should now live by his principles exclusively, and lay aside our own.
Col 3:11
The world makes distinctions between people, treating some with partiality and favouritism, whilst mistreating others with injustice and prejudice. To the member of Christ's church, all people are one. "There is no distinction."
God has "qualified us to share in the inheritance of the saints in light" (Col 1:12), and there is no higher status that human beings can achieve (Col 3:3-4).
However, being chosen thus by God does not cause us to look down on others, but rather to look up to God in humility and praise, to have compassion on our fellow men, and to wish and work to share our light with them, that they also might become chosen of God and accepted.
We associate with the poor and the lowly, with the sinners and the ignorant, with the persecuted and the downtrodden. We no longer think of ourselves as above them or superior to them. God wants them to be redeemed and reconciled to him too, and to share the kingdom with us. We are but his servants to that end (Col 1:20).