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Colossians
Colossians, Paul's letter to the
Colossians, Paul's letter to the In the NT, the seventh letter of Paul. Religious teachers had come into the Lycus valley and were disturbing the tranquillity of the Church at Colossae. There has been much scholarly discussion about their identity. Were they Gnostics—of the kind that flourished in the 2nd cent.
CE? Or Jewish Christians? Or loyal Jews?
Although
Gnosticism was most fully manifest in the 2nd cent.
CE, traces of it are already evident earlier, and some detect it as the false teaching which the epistle to the Colossians seems to reflect. Gnosticism was an eclectic mixture of speculation about the universe which it regarded as divided between good and evil powers who fought in the world.
Salvation was available to the privileged group of initiates who possessed the essential knowledge (
gnosis) conveyed by a revealed figure. Along with visionary experiences Gnostics promoted an extreme asceticism and distrust of the material world, so that some scholars regard the epistle's discouragement of self-abasement and the worship of
angels (Col. 2: 18) and the concept of
pleroma (Col. 1: 19) as references to Gnosticism.
On the other hand, the epistle does not seem to be concerned to refute Gnostic
docetism; nor were Gnostics given actually to the worship of angels—indeed these beings were thought to have had a hand in the creation of the evil world. For these reasons, another view is that the teaching which Col. refutes is that of Jews who did have their special days of abstinence and of celebration (Col. 2: 16) and who did venerate angels as messengers of God; they refused devotion to Christ (Col. 1: 15–20) and they held the
Law to be the appointed means of salvation. Moreover, the false
teachers demanded
circumcision. All of this points to
Judaism as the heresy attacked: but they may have been Jewish Christians, since in Col. 4: 11 the author pointedly mentions those few Jewish Christians who still support him. True, the epistle contains nothing of the violent abuse in which Paul denounced Jewish Christians in
Galatia (Gal. 3: 1), but in this case the whole approach is more restrained and tactful and consists more of a positive statement of Christian belief. Possibly this is because later in life and experience, Paul was learning better apologetics. But was Paul the author? It has been doubted. The long sentences are unlike other Pauline letters. Many little words (particles like ‘so’ or ‘but’) typical of other letters are absent in Col.; the great theological theme of the headship of Christ over the universal Church and the neglect of a future
eschatology all point to another author.
Yet there remain good reasons for holding on to the traditional view. Paul was quite capable of adapting his language to the occasion (cf. 1 Cor. 9: 19–23) and there remains the expression of a hope for the future (Col. 3: 4; 3: 24) and the theme of the present life in the
Spirit is already anticipated in earlier epistles. But for many readers the obvious connection with the authentic letter of Paul to Philemon (Col. 4: 9) is decisive.
The essence of the epistle's message is that of the unique role of Christ; in him the Christian
community enjoys the certainty of salvation. Paul uses the Jewish concept of
wisdom(Col. 1: 9), which was also attractive to converts from paganism and was an early example of refining concepts in order to express the Christian faith in terms intelligible to new audiences for whom an alien conservative framework was meaningless. It was a very subtle argument. In Christ the wisdom of God was made plain and his purpose executed. Other familiar words were used: ‘fulness’ (Col. 1: 19; 2: 9) and ‘mystery’ (Col. 1: 26 f.; 2: 2), by which Paul claimed that the whole being and power of God was present in Christ; there were no secondary intermediaries, such as the Jewish law (Col. 2: 14). Thus Paul, though indeed a man of the 1st cent., firmly rejected its mythologies, whether Jewish or Hellenistic, which interposed various kinds of supernatural barriers between God and humanity. For Paul the transcendence of God was absolute; and God in Christ deals directly with mankind.
If the epistle was written during Paul's imprisonment in Rome, its date would be between 60 and 64 CE.
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Colossians & Philemon
Magazine article from: Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society; 12/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; Colossians & Philemon. By Marianne Meye...00 paper. Thompson's commentary on Colossians & Philemon is part of the Two...sections. The first three are devoted to Colossians: Introduction to Colossians (pp...
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The Colossian Syncretism: The Interface Between Christianity and Folk Belief at Colossae
Magazine article from: Trinity Journal; 4/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...features of the Colossian philosophy...teaching of Colossians is examined...light upon the Colossian philosophy...writing of Colossians? If the parallels...restricted to Colossians itself in delineating the Colossian philosophy...
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The Making of Colossians: A Study on the Formation and Purpose of a Deutero-Pauline Letter
Magazine article from: The Catholic Biblical Quarterly; 10/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...Ris;nen) argues that the author of Colossians knew and drew on all of the undisputed...Philemon serves as the most basic frame of Colossians, other letters dominate in other parts of Colossians, for example, Galatians in the more...
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The Epistles to the Colossians and to Philemon: A Commentary on the Greek Text
Magazine article from: Journal of Biblical Literature; 1/1/1997; ; 700+ words
; The Epistles to the Colossians and to Philemon: A Commentary on...displayed in his new commentary on Colossians and Philemon for the New International...to strike a balance between them. Colossians, he argues, was written by Timothy...
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A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on Colossians and Philemon
Magazine article from: The Catholic Biblical Quarterly; 7/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...authenticity, place of writing, Colossians and Ephesians, Colossians and other Pauline letters, and the Colossian heresy. The commentary on Philemon...occasion, authenticity, relation to Colossians, and the institution of ancient...
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Sharing in the Inheritance: Identity and the Moral Life in Colossians
Magazine article from: Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society; 9/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...Jewish background to Colossians), Bevere conducts...advocates of the Colossian philosophy, wanted...secondary literature on Colossians. His argument, however, that the Colossian philosophy should...represented in the Colossian heresy (2:23...confronting the Colossians is ...
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Colossians: A Commentary
Magazine article from: The Catholic Biblical Quarterly; 10/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; JERRY L. SUMNEY, Colossians: A Commentary (NTL...holiness into which the Colossians have been initiated...Philippians serves the Colossian author as a model, his...between Luke 1-2 and Colossians, texts of comparable...
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The Colossian Syncretism: The Interface between Christianity and Folk Belief at Colossae
Magazine article from: The Catholic Biblical Quarterly; 7/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...references in Colossians 2 to characteristically...interpreting the Colossian situation. Nonetheless...various points in Colossians; angels are invoked by certain Colossian Christians as...referred to in Colossians 2, A. succeeds...
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The Colossian Cyncretism: The Interface Between Christianity and Folk Belief at Colossae
Magazine article from: Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society; 3/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...health of the Colossian church-the cosmic...because of the Colossians' solidarity with...serious student of Colossians, or from his...Marcus Barth (Colossians, p. 39), that even yet "the Colossian Religion...
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The Epistles to the Colossians and to Philemon
Magazine article from: Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society; 3/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...another standard commentary on Colossians and Philemon in that like...confine my remarks primarily to Colossians and to three matters of interest...hymn" about Christ and the Colossian "heresy.' Dunn places himself...strong likelihood" that Colossians was written by someone other...
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Colossians
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Colossians , New Testament letter. It was written...practice. Some scholars argue that Colossians is a pseudonymous work. In support...parallel in the undisputed Paulines. Colossians is similar to Ephesians in theological...
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Colossians, Paul's letter to the
Book article from: A Dictionary of the Bible
Colossians, Paul's letter to the In the NT, the seventh letter of Paul. Religious...earlier, and some detect it as the false teaching which the epistle to the Colossians seems to reflect. Gnosticism was an eclectic mixture of speculation about...
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Colossians, Epistle to the
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
Colossians, Epistle to the Book of the New Testament taking the form of a letter...letter, written from prison in Rome ( c. ad 61), is a warning to the Colossians not to adopt ideas from other faiths and philosophies that may undermine...
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Colossians, Letter to the
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
Colossians, Letter to the. An epistle of Paul and book of the New Testament.
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Philemon
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...of the New Testament, written to a Colossian named Philemon by Paul , probably when...time as the (probably pseudonymous) Colossians and Ephesians . The names Mark, Aristarchus...and Demas occur in both Philemon and Colossians.
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