10/2/2022 - God With Us
(Welcome)
(Opening Prayer)
(Series Introduction)
(Opening Tension)
(Colossians Context)
(Empathy)
(Personal Story)
(Heresy Quotes from the Author I was Reading at the Time)
(Personal Story)
(Poop Brownie Illustration)
(Pastoring Story)
I have sometimes heard objections made against certain expressions in Isaac Watts’ hymns in which our Lord is spoken of as the God that bled and died, and so forth. I fear that the objection is frequently aimed less at the poet than at the truth of the deity of our Lord. The objector figures as a critic because he does not dare to avow himself a heretic.
Take note that in the Scriptures you shall find frequent confusions of speech on the person of our Lord, intentionally made, in order to show that although the natures were distinct, still they were indissolubly united in the one person of Jesus. Of His one person might popularly be predicated that which in strict accuracy could only be true of his humanity, or only of his deity. To the one person of our Lord will be found to be ascribed what he did both as God and as man, and it is not needful for us to be wise or accurate above what is written by the Spirit of God.
(Kenosis Christology Heresy Context)
(Kenosis Christology Definition)
The scriptural basis for the doctrine of kenosis is found in Philippians 2:6–8, a passage which was likely part of an early hymn. It speaks of Christ as the one “who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped but emptied himself (Greek: ekenosen, the source of the English word “kenosis”), by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.”
Here, the emphasis is on the Lord assuming the “form of a servant,” explained as the “likeness of men” and “human form.” These explanatory phrases then serve as the means by which the kenosis continues further down, finding its culmination in Christ taking upon himself the thing most disparate with his divine nature—namely, death.
(Augustine Quote)
1. God Lived Among Us
“Fullness” (plērōma), a key word in Colossians, is used in 1:19 and 2:9. (The verb plēroō is used in 1:9, 25; 2:10; and 4:17.) The noun means “completeness” and is used of a wide range of things including God’s being (Eph. 3:19), time (Gal. 4:4), and grace in Christ (John 1:16). This full and complete Deity is said to “dwell” (katoikēsai, “abide lastingly or permanently”) in Christ.
While the fine point of syntax may be challenging, the general sense of the verse is reasonably clear: God has ensured that in Jesus is found all that makes God to be God.
(Dwelling Context)
2. God Reconciled Us to God
Through Christ God will reconcile to Himself all things. The phrase “all things” is limited to good angels and redeemed people since only things on earth and things in heaven are mentioned. Things “under the earth” (Phil. 2:10) are not reconciled. On God’s restoring of nature, see comments on Romans 8:19–21; and on the reconciling of sinners, see comments on Romans 5:10–11 and 2 Corinthians 5:17–20. It is important to note that people are reconciled to God (“to Himself”) not that God is reconciled to people.
1:20 reconcile The Greek word used here, apokatallassō, refers to the act of restoring a relationship to harmony. The purpose of Christ’s death on the cross was to bring all things created by Christ and for Christ (Col 1:16) into harmonious relationship.