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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Colossians 1:14

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Colossians 1:14

In whom we have redemption through his blood, [even] the forgiveness of sins:

14. redemption through his blood ] Omit the words “ through His blood,” on clear documentary evidence. They stand unchallenged in the parallel verse, Eph 1:7. And the truth they express comes out explicitly below, Col 1:20 ; Col 1:22.

Redemption: ” lit., “ the redemption,” here fairly represented by our redemption, as R.V. The word “redemption” (like its Greek equivalent) points by derivation to the idea of a rescue by ransom, whatever the ransom may be. This meaning often in usage vanishes, or at least retires, as where a deliverance by mere power is called a redemption (e.g. Exo 6:6). But it is always ready to reappear when the context favours; and certainly does so here, in view of the parallel passage in Eph. and Col 1:20 below. Cp. esp. Rom 8:23; and for illustration Mat 20:28; Heb 9:15 ; 1Pe 1:18-19. And see our notes on Eph 1:7.

the forgiveness of sins ] Lit., of the ( our) sins. Eph 1:7 has “( our) trespasses.” Observe this account of our Redemption in Christ. It is primarily Forgiveness, Remission. It involves indeed immensely more both for soul (Tit 2:14) and body (Rom 8:23); but all else is so inseparably bound up with Forgiveness as its sine qu non that the whole is expressed by this great part. See further on Eph 1:7.

Bp Lightfoot thinks that the “studied precision” both here and in Eph. of this description of Redemption may “point to some false conception of Redemption put forth by the heretical teachers.” And he shews that “the later Gnostics certainly perverted the term, applying it to their own formularies of initiation.” With them it would mean a “redemption” as remote as possible from ideas of forgiveness; a release of the mystic from the bondage of matter into the liberty of esoteric “knowledge.” Lightfoot asserts no direct connexion between these later Gnostics and the Colossian heretics; but he sees in the later teaching a hint of possible similar aberrations earlier. See further, Introd., ch. 3.

Before quitting Col 1:13, observe the phrase, “ in whom,” not “ through, or by, whom.” The idea thus given is that of union with Christ (see on Col 1:2 above). The Remission, won by the Redeemer’s dying Work, is for those who by faith are incorporated into the Redeemer’s mystical Person. The editor ventures to refer to his Thoughts on Union with Christ, pp. 104, 124, etc.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

In whom we have redemption; – See this explained in the notes at Eph 1:7. The passage here proves that we obtain forgiveness of sins through the blood of Christ; but it does not prove that this is all that we obtain through that blood.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Col 1:14-20

In Whom.

The deity of Christ

Christ is Divine because–


I.
He has redeemed us.


II.
He is the creator of all things.


III.
All things were created for His glory.


IV.
His eternal pre-existence.


V.
By Him all things consist. (B. W. Noel, M. A.)

Christ first


I.
In the metaphysical order.

1. He is the image of the invisible God.

2. It pleased God that in Him should all fulness (of the Divine attributes) dwell. He is therefore the Mediator of the knowledge of God.


II.
In the physical order. The first thesis determined the relation of Christ to God; this establishes His relation to Nature.

1. He is before all things, the firstborn (heir) of all creation.

2. He is the Author of all that exists. Consequently He is the Mediator of existence or natural life.


III.
In the theological order, which, as does the following, refers to His relations with men.

1. He is the Redeemer.

2. The reconciler. Thus He is the Mediator of the restoration of the normal relation of man to God.


IV.
In the moral order. He is the head of the spiritual body–the Church–and therefore is the Mediator of the new life or the spiritual creation.


V.
In the apocalyptic order, i.e., of the order of the things to come. He has died, as all men die, but He has also risen, and in that He has taken precedence of all, and His own will follow Him. Consequently He is the Mediator of life eternal. (Professor Reuss.)

Jesus Christ the end of the creation

(text in conjunction with Eph 1:9-10; Eph 3:9-11.)


I.
Statement.

1. The creation looked forward to the Christ from the beginning. Without Him for its goal it were purposeless. Not that he was latent in nature to be evolved, but it was the plan of creation that it should reach its consummation in Him.

2. In Him the universe subsists, is banded together because it completes itself in Him. Without Him it would disintegrate and be a chaos instead of a cosmos.

3. Although sin has disturbed the scheme of things and would wreck all, the original plan holds in Christ. The injury will be repaired and the universe attain its end.


II.
Plan of creation.

1. Matter is brought into being (Gen 1:1), and is rudimental (Gen 1:2). The Holy Ghost whoso province is evolution and organization broods over the elemental abyss. At length light becomes with, doubtless, its kindred agents, heat, electricity. Processes go on, and the atmosphere is constituted. The new agents become additional forces, and there results the mineral kingdom (Gen 1:3-10).

2. This is a preparation for higher planes of being. The floral world has a becoming, assimilating all that has gone before, and transforming them into the living organisms of root, trunk, bough, fruit, dec.

3. The vegetable world is a prophecy of something higher. In due time the animal world gathers up the elements of all below it, and exalts them into more complex and nobler organisms.

4. There is a pause. The eternal Three-in-One sit in council (Gen 1:26; Gen 2:7).

(1) The creation has been in travail with man as to his bodily nature in all the preceding formations. Man is the compendium, the apex of physical nature.

(2) In his creation another department of the spiritual world comes in view. It seeks to ally itself with the physical. It also would complete itself in man. By the inbreathing of the Almighty man becomes a living soul. The two realms thus meet in him, and invest him with unique dignity and prerogative. He is the microcosm of the universe.

(3) Of what man is this ideal true? Of the first Adam? He is man inchoate, in germ and possibilities only, not in the fulness of perfection. Can he raise himself and put all nature under him as its head? The tree of life blossoms with promise, but he cannot bridge the chasm between the Infinite and the finite. There must be a higher sphere than nature or man to bring out their meaning. If the Eternal Word will become man the problem is solved–the mighty void between God and man will be filled up.

5. The Son of God did become man. He passed through every ordeal triumphantly, and was glorified at the right hand of God. The universe is glorified in Him. Thus did He sum up in Himself the creation. It tended towards Him from the first, and finds its last, deepest sense and full satisfaction in Him the true, archetypal Man.


III.
Corollaries.

1. The creation is a unity, not a granulated mass of things having no other relation but mechanical juxtaposition; but an organic whole, having one Head who fills all things from Himself, and sends energy and direction through the whole. Each several part has its due relation to the others, and the whole to Christ.

2. The Incarnation belongs to creation. It is its crown, and is essential to its order and perfection. It is not an intrusion. It is sin that is the innovation in the order of the universe. And the Incarnation carries in it plenary resources for the overmastering of sin. By His obedience unto death the Head of the universe rendered satisfaction for human guilt; and by the powers of the Incarnation He will cast out sin. Somewhere, in the outer darkness, some cesspool shall receive all the filth of the universe and hide it for ever.

3. There is suggested a solution of the problem of miracles. They are no violations of the plan of creation. Each succeeding system bore in itself higher forces and methods than the preceding, but without disturbance. So humanity imported into the world methods and powers supreme over all beneath it, but in entire harmony therewith. That such ascendency should show itself in our Lords miracles there is nothing contranatural. Sin being foreign has brought an unnatural condition of things, and our Lords hushing of the storm, expulsion of demons, healing the sick, and raising the dead, were but foretokenings of the coming restitution of all things to their natural state of purity, health, and life. To put creation back again into its regular condition is not to do violence to nature. As Augustine says, A miracle is not a contradiction of nature, but of nature as man knows it.

4. Here is the solution of the astronomical objection to Christianity. Astronomy is supposed to demonstrate mans extreme littleness, and to show that his actions good or bad are beneath the notice of God. But man in Christ is the end of the universe. In Him man stands in closest union with the Infinite centre of all being. All things are His (1Co 3:21-23). It is quality, not quantity, that counts in the trancendental calculus. Man must be intrinsically of greater value than all that went to prepare the way for him. This will serve to explain the interest of angels in him. The Incarnation signifies that man has an inherent dignity no hugeness of the physical world and no grandeur of angels can equal. He has no superior but God, and to Him alone his knee should bow.

5. If the all is one organic unity, the lower joined to the higher, and looking forward to it, then there must be a correspondence between the lower and the higher. The natural will be a parable of the supernatural, and all types must sum themselves up in Christ their prototype. Science will yet see the harmony of reason and faith.

6. Christ being the Firstborn and Head of the creation, He is the Priest of the universe (Heb 5:7). All other priesthood must be derived from Him. All worship must be offered through Him. All blessing will return from God through Him.

7. Christ is the end of history. The movement of our race is a process towards manhood in Christ. Sin has distracted the current, but has not arrested it. The religions, philosophies, and governments of the old world prepared the way for the first advent. A mighty impulse was thrilled through the nation from that day directing all movements towards the second advent.

8. Seeing that Christ is head over all, all things must become subject to Him. We see not yet all things put under Him. Sin has disnaturalized man, but it shall be overruled and made to serve the very ends it sought to frustrate (1Co 15:24-28; 2Ti 2:19). Evil does not inhere in matter. Matter will be transformed (Rom 8:19-22).

9. The Incarnation must needs be perpetual. Were the Son of God to lay aside His humanity, the creation would fail of its end and complement. It confers upon the creation supreme blessing; to relinquish it would entail a deep curse.

10. Men must needs come into full and permanent union with Christ. Severed from Him they can do nothing. Sin, the discord in the everlasting order, must be renounced. Christ must abide in men and they in Him, in order that sin may be eliminated. Only thus can they attain the Divine Ideal transformation into true manhood in the image of God. (C. P. Jennings.)

The witness of creation to the gospel

1. The subject of the chapter is the glory of the Son of God.

(1) In His essential relation to God He is the true eikon basilike–only image which it is not idolatry to worship.

(2) His relation to the universe is that of immediate Creator.

(3) His permanent relation to every creature is that of a central point for all phenomena.

(4) His headship over the new redeemed humanity is that of the first-born among the dead, the source of risen life to all the body.

(5) His central pre-eminence in the whole spiritual world lies in the fact that He is Peacemaker by blood, the sole Reconciler to God. Never did John soar higher or sweep a wider horizon than this.

2. To confine ourselves to one thought here. Christ is the only link of connection between created minds and the unapproachable, unknowable Godhead. Image of the invisible God is parallel with Johns No man hath seen God at any time, etc., with Heb 1:1-2, and with the Masters He that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father. The function of Revealer, however, does not attach to Christs incarnate life only; He was the Word of God before, and revealed God in creation. From this follows that God the Revealer, when He tells of God in Nature and in Redemption must speak in harmonious terms. Both discoveries must agree, and hence we expect to find certain lines in physics leading up to Christianity, certain thoughts of the Divine mind which grow clearer when I cast back fresh light from redemption.

3. What, then, is there in nature to fit into the representation of Deity which we gather from–


I.
The incarnation.

1. This stands on the threshold of the Christian system, and has no parallel in history, and at first sight none in nature. Yet look a little closer, and you will find that it rests upon the fact that man was made in the image of his Maker. For the Son and perfect Image of Godhead to become man–making the thoughts, emotions, and activities of our nature a glass wherein to mirror the heart of Deity–implies some affinity between the Divine and human, or some previous resemblance of man to God. Reason must, in some fashion, reflect the thoughts of God, and virtue His holiness, and points of moral and intellectual contact must bind the human spirit to that of the Incarnate Redeemer. How else could God become incarnate to redeem?

2. Now nature is alive with thoughts that are very human. God utters His mind in His works, and that mind is like our own. If that were not so science would be impossible. The worlds Maker and its observer must have something in common, if the observer is to understand the Makers meaning. A world put together by a Being whose notions of truth, utility, purpose, etc., bore no relation to mine would be a world unintelligible to me. But the world satisfies the reason and gratifies the taste of the human student, who detects in it with joy another mind at work similar to his own.

(1) You know how keen is the pleasure many take in mechanical contrivance, but the pages of modern books of science are full of beautiful contrivances.

(2) Equally human is the parsimony of nature. He who made this world does not overcome difficulties by inventing some fresh force for every occasion; He will rather go round about to make existing instruments answer a new purpose. To the same economical habit it is due that through the organized tribes of being certain radical types are perseveringly adhered to. A few governing ideas, modified in details only as far as needful, are made to do service, and give rise to endless diversity. This is just the style of workmanship that workmen admire.

(3) Very human, too, is the place occupied in the works of God by beauty and utility. In mans productions decoration is always subordinated to convenience, and wise men will sacrifice the ornamental without remorse when it can be gained only at the expense of human well-being. Now the original school of all art is the handiwork of God. So lavish is His decoration of the most unnoticed Objects that He must do it because He loves it; yet it is never put before utility. Nay, some animals have been made unlovely to suit their convenience; but even in them ornament is introduced where it can do no harm.

3. Nature, then, betrays in its Creator a mind so like our own as to lay a foundation for the Incarnation. The Son in impressing on all things His stamp, as Gods image left a signature so human-like that we can well credit the old Scripture when it says man wears the likeness of the Son of God; and we see a propriety in the announcement of the new scripture that the same Son wears the nature which He had on purpose made so correspondent with His own. Creation of mans mind in Gods image; incarnation of Gods image in manhood–these are two answering facts, the one witnessed by science, the other by the gospel.


II.
The atonement.

1. In so far as this is a moral fact, whereas in nature there is neither sin nor retribution, and therefore no need of atonement, we cannot expect to find there any suggestion of reconciliation with God. Nevertheless nature indicates that the Creator possesses moral qualities, and is a character as well as an intellect,

2. Some particulars of this.

(1) Thinkers have been startled by the gospel declaration that God cares for so insignificant a creature as man. But does He appear to the student as a person likely to overlook any interest because it is minute. Remember what pains the scientists tell us have been expended on the most tiny and obscure piece of organized matter to perfect its adaptation to its place, and to elaborate every organ of it for its proper purpose. It is for investigators to tell us whether they do not find traces of kindness in this such as bespeak a benevolent heart as well as a contriving intellect. If they do, then the love of God, which seeks and saves one lost soul, is but the crown of a character patient, considerate, which has left its traces on the lower creation.

(2) But there are facts of an opposite order. Violence, death, extinction have always obtained. But whatever difficulties attend this frightful havoc of life, the sacrifice ministers always to some upward movement. Lower life feeds higher life, or the individual becomes a victim to some agency needful for the general good, the gale, the flood, the lightning: or, as the earth grows fit to bear nobler forms, the earlier ones pass away. We read here the law of sacrifice–unconscious and involuntary, indeed, because these creatures have no power of moral choice; but true, nevertheless, because sacrificed for some nobler good and more enduring end. See how beasts of prey have to make room for population, and serviceable animals are slaughtered for mans use. When I pass from this scene to Golgotha I am not conscious of any violent shock. There is pain for the good of others, and death as the price of life. The Maker of the suffering creation is not afraid to suffer for others. He obeys His own law, and the cross would have been a far more surprising spectacle had it stood upon an earth where no creature ever bled to advance creations good.

(3) The only key we can find to the Atonement lies in the inviolability of Divine law. To magnify that God gave His Son to die. Now it would have been surprising had the Son as Creator betrayed any indifference to the violence of natural law, and yet come as Redeemer to die to vindicate moral law. No such inconsistency appears. Physical students insist on the constancy with which the former avenges transgression; and so the latter decrees death for disobedience. And it could so little be set aside in favour of mercy, that not until the Lawgiver had Himself honoured His own statute, and suffered His own penalty, did He forgive.

3. As far, then, as such indications go, the face of God, as traced indistinctly in Creation, answers to His face as its glory shines in the gospel of Christ. (J. O. Dykes, D. D.)

We have redemption through His blood.

I. Redemption. Deliverance–

1. From the guilt of sin, original or actual, of omission or commission.

2. From the power and prevalence of sin (Rom 6:14; Heb 9:13-14; Act 3:26; lPe 1:18; Mat 1:21; Tit 2:14).

3. From the tyranny of Satan (Col 1:13; 1Jn 3:8; Luk 22:31-32).

4. From the curse of the law (Gal 3:13; Gal 4:5).

5. From the wrath of God.

(1) In this world (Rom 5:1; Luk 2:14).

(2) In the next (1Th 1:10; Act 4:12).


II.
Its means: His blood.

1. It was necessary that our Redeemer should be man as well as God (1Ti 2:5; Heb 2:14-17), that He might mediate between both parties (Job 9:33).

2. That He should suffer (Heb 8:5; Luk 24:26) a bloody death (Heb 9:22).

(1) To expiate our sins (1Jn 2:2; Isa 53:5-6).

(2) To conquer Satan (Heb 2:14).

(3) To reconcile God to us and us to God (Rom 5:10-11; Eph 2:16).


III.
Its benefit. Forgiveness of sins.

1. The names in Scripture given to it.

(1) Remission (Act 2:38),

(2) dismission, releasing (Isa 61:1).

2. Mercifulness to our sins (Heb 8:12; Luk 18:13).

(1) Passing over sin (Rom 3:25).

(2) Purging from sin (Psa 51:7).

(3) Not remembering our sins (Jer 31:34; Heb 8:12).

(4) Covering sin (Psa 32:1; Psa 85:2; Psa 51:9).

(5) Taking away and removing sin (Psa 103:10-12; Exo 34:7; Lev 16:20-22).

(6) Casting behind Gods back (Isa 38:17; Psa 90:8).

(7) Blotting out sin (Isa 43:25; Isa 44:22).

(8) Not imputing sin (Psa 32:1-2; Rom 4:7-8).

(9) Casting it in the depth of the sea (Mic 7:18-19).

2. The nature of it: an act of Gods grace, whereby He absolves us from the obligation to those punishments, which by His law are due to us for those sins.

(1) In general it is an act of Gods grace.

(a) Of God. It is ascribed to Him alone (Exo 34:7; Mar 2:7). We are to ask it of Him only (Mat 6:12). He alone justifies (Rom 8:33). Our sins are only against Him (Psa 51:4).

(b) Of His grace–not wisdom, power, justice (Isa 43:25)–in Christ (Eph 1:7).

(2) The specific difference.

(a) We are obliged to bear the punishments due by Gods law to sin (Gal 3:10).

(b) God takes off that obligation (2Sa 12:13; Mar 3:28-29).


IV.
This benefit is only by Christs death.

1. All mankind is guilty before God, and so obnoxious to His wrath and everlasting punishment (Rom 3:19; Gal 3:22).

2. The eternal Son was pleased to take mans nature upon Him so as to become both God and man in one person (Isa 7:14; Rom 9:5; Php 2:6-7).

3. Christ in this nature was pleased to suffer disgrace, the curses of the law (Gal 3:13). The wrath of God (Mat 27:46). An ignominious, accursed, painful, and bloody death; and all for sin, the only cause of death (Heb 10:12).

4. Christ suffered all this, not for Himself (1Pe 2:22; 1Pe 3:18; Heb 7:26), but for us who partake of that nature in which He suffered (Isa 53:5-6; Rom 4:25; Gal 1:4; 1Co 15:3).

5. These sufferings were of greater worth than if all men had suffered eternal death (Act 20:28).

6. Hence God was pleased to accept of them as a sufficient price of our redemption, and satisfaction to His justice for our sins (Mat 20:28; 1Ti 2:6; Eph 1:6).

7. Gods justice being thus satisfied, He is reconciled unto us, and takes off our obligations to punishment, by reason of what His Son underwent for us; and therefore for His sake is said to pardon our sins (Rom 5:10; Col 1:20; 2Co 5:21).


V.
Use.

1. Hence you may learn what ground we have to trust in Christ for pardon (Rom 8:34).

2. Hence be advised to make it your business to get your sins forgiven: considering–

(1) How miserable you are without it: God is angry (Psa 7:11); hell is threatened.

(2) How happy with it (Psa 32:1-2). Your persons accepted and justified (Psa 32:1-2; Rom 4:6-7); God reconciled and become your friend (Rom 5:1; Rom 9:1-33; Rom 10:3. All things working for your good, and glory for your reward. (Bishop Beveridge.)

Redemption

The liberty for which the slave longs is, perhaps, the sweetest earthly cup man drinks. Health has been often said to be the greatest earthly blessing. What are money, luxury, titles, a crown even, without it; but what is health without liberty. We sympathize with the instinctive love of freedom in animals–the noisy joy of the dog when he gets off his chain; the noble eagle chained to the perch, strangling in its struggles to escape. Much more do we sympathize with our fellow-creatures, whether slaves or citizens, who have made the altars of liberty red with their blood, preferring death to bondage. But them is a more degrading and dreadful slavery, that of the slaves of Satan, who are sold under sin. Would that we set the same price on spiritual as we do on earthly liberty! What struggles would then be made and prayers offered for salvation! And when saved ourselves, how anxious we should be for the salvation of others.


I.
We all need redemption. To a man who knows he is nigh unto death offer a medicine that will cure him, and he will buy it at any price; but offer the same to one who believes himself in health and he holds it cheap. For a similar reason are Christ and His redemption rejected of men. So the great work of Gods Spirit is to rouse a man from the torpor induced by the poison of sin. And blessed the book, preacher, or providence that sends the conviction into our hearts. For to a soul convinced of misery who so welcome as the Saviour?

1. The slavery of sin is natural to man, We pity the mother as robbed of one of her best joys, who knows that the little creature on her bosom is a slave. But that calamity is ours. In sin did my mother conceive me. I am carnal, sold under sin. Ye were the slaves of sin–not one hired for a period, but branded with the mark of a perpetual bondage.

2. This slavery is the universal state of man. Slavery is the worst and oldest of human institutions. At an early period, in Cain, he who should have been his brothers keeper, became his murderer; and when man did become his brothers keeper, it was too often as an owner. But, wherever slavery obtained, some were free. It is not so with sin. The king and the beggar are both slaves; every mans heart is black, whatever his face may be.

3. This slavery is the state of all unconverted men.

(1) Some are slaves of gold. What bondage is equal to that? for a man to harden his heart to the claims of pity, to deny his own flesh and blood, to lie and cheat, or, if not, throw his soul away for money.

(2) Some are slaves of lust. To what base society and acts of villainy do their tyrant passions condemn them. The thief that steals my money is a man of honour compared with him who steals a womans virtue.

(2) Some are slaves of drunkenness. Of all slavery this is the most helpless and hopeless. Other sins drown conscience, this season as well.

(3) Some are slaves to the opinions of the world. The Macedonian boasted that he had conquered the world; the world can boast that it has conquered them. Theirs the miserable condition of a servant who has to bear in some ill-governed household the caprices, not of one mistress, but of many.


II.
Our redemption is not a simple matter of time. Every fifty years, and in certain cases, seven, redeemed the Hebrew. Everywhere time works changes, the young grow old, the poor get rich, the rich poor. Time alters the form of the globe. But amid these changes the condition of the sinner alters not. The longer you live in sin the more hopeless is salvation. Do you say, But what am I to do? Can I redeem myself? Assuredly not. But are we to sit still as though redemption would come like a jubilee in the common course of providence? No, we are to be up and doing. I do not say that we are to rise like an oppressed nation which wrings its liberties from a tyrant hand; nor that we can purchase redemption; nor that through works of righteousness we can lay any claim to its blessings. And yet I say, Labour for the meat that endureth unto everlasting life. There are various ways of being diligent. Though men call him idle the poor beggar is as diligent as others; and such as that suppliants, along with the use of other means, are the labours to which Gods mercy and your own necessities call you. Unable to save yourself, besiege the throne of grace.


III.
Christ is the redeemer. There is no other. His types and symbols teach this. There was but one ark in the flood, and all perished save those who sailed in it. There was but one altar in the Temple, one way through the Red Sea, one Mediator between God and man.

1. Christ does not redeem us by simply revealing the truth. Were He a Saviour only in this sense there are others. From the Sun of Righteousness He changes into a star, one of a constellation which is formed of Moses and the prophets. Many of them, indeed, had more to do in revealing Gods will than Christ. No book bears His name, and the truths which fell from Him form but a fraction of Scripture. Yet who but He is set forth as the Redeemer, in whose name else are we commanded to believe and be baptized?

2. Christ does not redeem us by His example. That man is in a sense my saviour who leads me safely along any dangerous path, and in a corresponding way some say Christ redeemed us. He set us such an example, that by following His steps we may enter the kingdom of heaven. Alas for safety if it turn on that I Walk as He walked! Who is sufficient for that? We should certainly attempt to follow Jesus, yet our best attempts will leave us more and more convinced that our only hope for redemption lies in the mercy of the Father and the merits of the Son.

3. Christ has redeemed us by suffering in our room and stead. Without shedding of blood is no remission. The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth from all sin. (T. Guthrie, D. D.)


I.
What remission of sins is.

1. Sin is a violation of the law of God (1Jn 3:4). In this law there is the precept which is the rule of duty, and the sanction or penalty which shows what God might do if He dealt with us according to our merit. Accordingly in sin there is–

(1) The fault. Man, Gods subject, and obliged to Him by His benefits, swerves from the rule of his duty and exposes himself to Gods judgment.

(2) The guilt, which is liableness to punishment.

2. Forgiveness is a dissolving the obligation to punishment, a freedom in Gods way from the consequences of sin.

(1) It is not a disannulling of the act as a natural action. What is done cannot be undone.

(2) Nor is it abolished as a criminal action. Forgiveness does not make a fault to be no fault. The innocent are acquitted, but the guilty are pardoned as sinners.

(3) Nor is the merit of the sinful act lessened, it still deserves punishment.

(4) Forgiveness therefore is a passing by the fault so that it shall not rise up in judgment against us. The fault is the sinners, the punishment the Judges, which He may fashion on certain terms stated in the law of grace.

I prove it

(1) from the nature of the thing, for there is such a relation between the fault and the guilt, the sin and punishment; that the one cannot be without the other. Therefore, if the Judge will not impute the fault there will be an immunity from punishment.

(2) From the common rule of speaking among men. He cannot be said to forgive a fault who exacts punishment; and what do men mean when they pray for pardon but that they may be exempted from punishment?

(3) It would impeach the justice and mercy of God were He to punish where He has pardoned.

(4) Scripture phrases show that God blots out our sins (Psa 71:2; Psa 32:1; Isa 38:17; Mic 7:19; Jer 31:34).


II.
The nature of redemption.

1. Our being redeemed supposes a captivity and bondage.

(1) Unrenewed men are slaves to sin (Tit 3:3; Joh 8:34). Men imagine a life of vanity to be a very good life, and it were so if liberty consisted in doing what we list rather than what we ought. But it is not, and experience shows that men cannot leave their base satisfactions.

(2) As they are under sin so they are under Satan (Eph 2:2; 2Ti 2:26).

(3) For this they are under the curse of God.

2. To recover us there was a price to be paid by way of ransom to God. We are not delivered by prayer, nor mere force, nor out of pity, but by just satisfaction to provoked justice. The price was not paid to Satan, who is a usurper–from him we are delivered by force–but to God. Man had not sinned against Satan, but God, to whom belong condemnation or pardon. And God being satisfied, Satan has no power over us. That redemption implies payment of a price is clear (Mat 20:28; 1Ti 2:6). Christ in recovering men in dealing with God is set forth as a Lamb slain (Rev 5:5-6); in dealing with Satan as a lion recovering the prey. A ransom was necessary because God had made a former covenant which was not to be quit but upon valuable consideration, lest His moral attributes should fall to the ground.

(1) The honour of His justice was to be secured (Rom 3:5-6; Gen 18:25). If God should pardon without satisfaction how should He be reverenced as the holy Governor of the world? Hence Rom 3:25-26.

(2) His wisdom. If the law should be recalled, the Lawgiver would run the hazard of levity.

(3) His holy nature would not permit it. Some way must be found to signify His hatred of sin (Psa 11:6).

(4) His authority. It would be a derogation to the authority of His law if it might be broken with impunity.

(5) His truth. Gods word is not to be regarded as a scarecrow (Gen 3:5; Deu 29:19-20).

3. None was fit to give this ransom but Jesus Christ, the God-man. He was man to undertake it in our name, God to perform it in His own strength; a man that He might be under the law and die, God that He might put the stamp upon the metal and make it current coin. By taking human nature a price was put into His hands, to which His Divine nature gave the requisite value (Act 20:28; Heb 9:13).

4. Nothing performed by Christ could be a sufficient ransom but His death.

(1) To answer the types wherein without shedding of blood was no remission.

(2) In the nature of the thing (Joh 8:20). Death was threatened to sin, and feared by the sinner, and must be borne, therefore, for deliverance.

5. From this ransom there is a liberty resulting to us; but not a liberty to sin (Rom 6:22). Christ came not to free us from the duty of the law, but its penalty, otherwise it would promote the devils interest. He redeemed us that we might serve God.

6. We are not partakers of this liberty till we are united to Christ by faith in whom.


III.
Remission of sins is a principal part of redemption.

1. How a part.

(1) Redemption is taken for the laying down of the price. That was done on the cross (Heb 9:12).

(2) In its application. Besides the ransom there is actual deliverance. Complete redemption we shall enjoy at the last day (Rom 8:23; Eph 4:30; Eph 1:14). Begun deliverance, which we now enjoy by faith, consists of justification (Eph 1:7), where sin is freely pardoned, and we delivered from evil and wrath; and sanctification (1Pe 1:18; Tit 2:14).

2. A principal part, for–

(1) The power of Satan is destroyed (Act 26:18).

(2) The reign of sin is broken. The gift of the sanctifying Spirit is part of our pardon applied (Col 2:13).

(3) We are eased of our tormenting fears.

(4) Death is unstinged (1Co 15:56).

(5) The obligation to, eternal punishment ceases.


IV.
Use. To persuade you to seek after this benefit.

1. We all once needed it. Nothing but pardon will serve your turn.

(1) Not forbearance on Gods part.

(2) Not senseless forgetfulness or baseless hope on yours.

2. The best of us still need it. Renewed sins need new pardon; daily infirmities daily repentance. (T. Manton, D. D.)

1. The apostle had been speaking of Christian privileges as being matters of present enjoyment–meetness for heaven; deliverance from sin, dec., are in the actual possession of the Christian.

2. There are two methods proposed by which men hope to secure Gods favour. Thousands consider it presumption to profess to have it, but hope to do so after they have prayed more and done more good deeds. Gods method is the reverse. What man places at the end He places at the beginning; what man says work for, He says work from. Turning away our thoughts from self He fixes them on Christ.

3. The different results on feeling resulting are immense. The man who works for future forgiveness has at best the spirit of a servant; he who takes forgiveness now as Gods free gift in Christ enjoys reconciliation and sonship.


I.
Redemption as identical with forgiveness of sins.

1. Redemption is something more than rescue. If you see a man in danger and pluck him out you save but not redeem him. If you see a man oppressed and snatch him from his enemy you deliver but not redeem him. Redemption is the release of a man by the payment of ransom. We by our transgressions have exposed ourselves to Gods law, which knows no pity, holds us in its grasp, and will inflict, unless we are delivered, the fearful penalty of eternal death. But if that penalty be remitted we are redeemed, and so forgiveness is equivalent to redemption. But sin has also brought us under its own power, and so made us its slaves; and the only way of securing us and setting us free is forgiveness.

2. The one thing we absolutely require as sinners is the remission of the horrible penalty, and it is neither irrational nor immoral to be afraid of that penalty; but we must be released from the power of sin before our happiness can be secured. Tell me that I am not to be punished and you have made me glad, but you have not inspired me with love to God. But tell me that the means of forgiveness is the sacrifice of Gods dear Son, that God pardons not only as a Sovereign but as a Father, and the power of sin will be broken, and I enter on the joyful, ennobling service of love.


II.
Redemption as effected through the blood of Christ.

1. In Php 2:1-30. the apostle, in speaking of Christs death, has in view Christs obedience; here in using the term blood his idea is expiation, and so elsewhere where the word is used; because in the Jewish sacrifices it was not the death of the victim, but its blood that was the typical instrument of expiation.

2. Such a redemption is necessary to meet the demands of the heart and to produce a changed feeling towards God.

(1) Forgiveness must be a righteous forgiveness; not a mere easy, weak-minded passing over of transgression. Redemption by the blood of Christ meets this demand of the awakened conscience, for in the cross God appears more awful than elsewhere in His hatred of sin and His determination to punish it.

(2) But it is also the forgiveness of a Father we want, and nowhere have we such an exhibition of Gods love as in the cross. Conclusion.–This redemption is only to be had in Christ. Out of Him, however respectable and moral, we are slaves of sin and exposed to the curse. (G. Calthrop, M. A.)

Plan of redemption

Suppose a large graveyard surrounded by a high wall, with only one entrance by a large iron gate which is fast bolted. Within these wails are tens of thousands of human beings, by one disease descending to the grave. There is no balm to relieve them, no physician there: they must perish. This is the condition of man as a sinner. All have sinned, and the soul that sinneth shall die. While man was in this deplorable state, Mercy, an attribute of Deity, came down and stood at the gate, looked at the scene, and wept over it, exclaiming, Oh, that I might enter! I would bind up their wounds; I would relieve their sorrows; I would save their souls. While Mercy stood weeping at the gate, an embassy of angels, commissioned from the court of heaven to some other world, passing over, paused at the sight, and Heaven forgave that pause. Seeing Mercy standing there, they cried, Mercy, Mercy, can you not enter can you look upon this scene, and not pity? can you pity, and not relieve? Mercy replied, I can see; and in her tears she added, I pity, but cannot relieve.–Why can you not enter?–Oh! said Mercy, Justice has barred the gate against me, and I cannot, must not, unbar it. At this moment Justice himself appeared, as it were to watch the gate. The angels inquired of him, Why will you not let Mercy in? Justice replied, My law is broken, and it must be honoured: die they or Justice must. At this there appeared a form among the angelic band, like unto the Son of God, who, addressing Himself to Justice, said, What are thy demands? Justice replied, My terms are stern and rigid. I must have sickness for their health; I must have ignominy for their honour; I must have death for life; without the shedding of blood there is no remission.–Justice, said the Son of God, I accept thy terms. On Me be this wrong, and let Mercy enter.–When, said Justice, will you perform this promise? Jesus replied, Four thousand years hence, upon the hill of Calvary, without the gates of Jerusalem, I will perform it in My own person. The deed was prepared and signed in the presence of the angels of God. Justice was satisfied; and Mercy entered, preaching salvation in the name of Jesus. The deed was committed to the patriarchs; by them to the kings of Israel and the prophets; by them it was preserved till Daniels seventy weeks were accomplished; and, at the appointed time, Justice appeared on the hill of Calvary, and Mercy presented to him the important deed. Where, said Justice, is the Son of God? Mercy answered, Behold Him at the bottom of the hill, bearing His own cross; and then he departed, and stood aloof at the hour of trial. Jesus ascended the hill, while in His train followed His weeping Church. Justice immediately presented Him with the important deed, saying, This is the day when this bond is to be executed. When He received it, did He tear it in pieces, and give it to the winds of heaven? No: He nailed it to His cross, exclaiming, It is finished! Justice called on holy fire to come down, and consume the sacrifice. Holy fire descended: it swallowed His humanity; but, when it touched His divinity, it expired, and there was darkness over the whole heavens; but, glory to God in the highest! on earth peace, and good-will to men. (Christmas Evans.)

The greatness of redemption

If that a king should empty all his coffers, and alienate all his crown land to rescue his subjects, he should show himself a natural prince: but what is this to that ransom which our King hath tendered? (P. Bayne, B. D.)

Redemption incomplete until accepted by faith in Christ

Suppose there were twenty traitors in the Tower lay condemned; say again, the prince should yield his father such satisfaction for some whom he would save, wherewith the king his father should be contented, and give him their pardon thereupon; here the thing is done betwixt the king and his son, yet till the prince send to them, write to the keeper to deliver such and such to him, they are in the state they were in, and so continue. So it is with God, Christ, and us: the redemption is all concluded betwixt God and His beloved Son; yet till this is effectually made known to our hearts, so that they believe on this grace of Christ, we are as we were, in hold, in the fear of our condemnation. We are justified through the redemption in Christ, but so that before it can be applied in us we must have faith in His blood, being set forth unto us in the word preached. Can we have the strength of bread without eating bread? No more can we have any benefit by the bread of life without believing on Him. In Christ by faith we have these things. (P. Bayne, B. D.)

Redemption partial and complete

We have that redemption which consists in the forgiveness of sins, and having obtained it are delivered from the bondage of the devil, of sin, and of hell. The devil cannot any longer detain us as captives, rule us as his slaves, and drive us here and there as he pleases; sin itself which cleaves to us cannot reign in us; finally, even hell cannot torment us with perpetual fear, or claim any lordship over us. For, our sins being remitted, the power of the devil is broken, the wrath of God is removed, the condemnation of eternal death is taken away. From all these things, therefore, we have redemption at the same time that we have forgiveness of sins. But there is yet another bondage, viz., that of the corruption of our bodies, and of eternal sufferings, from which the elect are not yet redeemed, but shall be redeemed at the coming of Christ (Luk 21:28). The apostle calls this the redemption of the purchased possession (Eph 1:14). This also Christ merited for us: but He would not bestow upon believers at once this incorruption of their bodies, and deliverance from present external miseries, and from the remains of sin, for the following reasons.

1. Lest the condition of the Head and of the members should be plainly dissimilar. For Christ Himself was a Man of sorrows: He did not at once sit down at the right hand of the Father in glory, but first underwent hunger, thirst, crucifixion, and death: it is therefore but consistent that the members of Christ should pass likewise through sufferings and death itself to glory.

2. They are not fully redeemed from these bodily afflictions, neither from the remains of sin, that they may have matter for glorifying God, whilst they endure them with the greatest constancy and patience, whilst they resist with all their might all the lusts of sin; that God, even as a just Judge, may confer upon them, after having well fought this fight, the unfading crown.

3. He would not straightway deliver the faithful from this bodily misery instantly, lest Christians should seem to embrace Christ on account of this temporal deliverance, rather than on account of that spiritual one. (Bishop Davenant.)

Redemption Gods forgiveness as King and Father

Suppose that a son had sinned grievously against a parent who was also a king. By the sons breach of the laws he has exposed himself to a certain penalty; but he has also alienated himself from his father- produced in his heart a spirit of distrust and aversion which becomes deeper and more intense the longer he holds aloof. There are two things then to be considered: the punishment to which the son is liable; and the depraving, alienating influence which his transgression exercises over his mind. Now, if the breach is ever to be healed, it will not be enough for the father to say, I remit the penalty of your transgression: I forbear to strike: you may go. The son may, will, be glad to escape suffering, but he will not be drawn thereby in love towards his father. The old alienation will rankle still, and will break out presently in fresh offences. Something more, then, is needed, viz., the exhibition of the fathers love towards the erring son; there is needed that it be said, I not only release you from merited suffering; but I forgive you: I open my heart to you, and take you back into it. I am only too glad to welcome you to my heart and home, with the feeling that my child is no longer a wanderer and an alien, but has given me back his love. Then the power of the transgression will be broken, and the interrupted relation between father and child will be restored. Precisely in the same way, if forgiveness of sin meant simply the remission of penalties, there would be in the heart of the sinner nothing but a cold and selfish thankfulness and self-congratulation for escape from pain. But our sins are forgiven us in such a way that the heart of a loving Father is displayed in the act. (G. Calthrop, M. A.)

Redemption atonement for and remission of sin

It is the Day of Atonement. Two young kids of the goats are presented before the Lord at the door of the tabernacle. Those young spotless creatures are a double type of Jesus when in the councils of eternity He presented Himself before Jehovah, saying, Lo, I come to do Thy will, O God. The lot is cast–one for the Lord, the other for the scapegoat–to deter mine which shall represent our Saviour in the act of His death, and which in the fruit of His death, viz., the bearing of the sins of the people. The first falls as a sin-offering. The high priest having caught its flowing blood in a golden bowl, enters within the veil, and, alone, sprinkles it upon the mercy-seat. Coming forth, he goes up to the living goat; standing over it, he lays his hands upon its head; and, amid solemn silence, confesses over the dumb creature all the sins of the people. The prayer finished, that goat bears on its devoted head the guilt of the people. And now observe the act which foreshadowed how Jesus by taking our sins bore them away. The congregation opens, forming a lane that stretches away from the tabernacle to the boundless desert. While every lip is sealed, and every eye intent, a fit man steps forth, and taking hold of the victim, he leads it on and away through the parted crowd. Amid the haze of the burning sands and distant horizon their forms grow less and less, and at length vanish from sight. He and that goat are now alone. They travel on and further on, till, removed beyond the reach of any human eye, far off in the distant wilderness, he casts loose the sin-laden creature. And when, after the lapse of hours, the people descry a speck in the distance, which draws nearer and nearer, until they recognize the fit man, the people see, and we in figure see also, how our Lord, when He was made an offering for sin, took the load of our guilt upon Him, bearing it away, as it were, to a land that was not known. As far as the east is from the west, so far hath He removed our transgressions from us. (T. Guthrie, D. D.)

Pardon, not justice, wanted

A French girl of fourteen appeared before Napoleon, and casting herself at his feet, cried, Pardon, sire! pardon for my father! And who is your father? asked Napoleon, and who are you? My name is Lajolia, she said, and with flowing tears added, but, sire, my father is doomed to die. Ah, young lady, replied Napoleon, I can do nothing for you. It is the second time your father has been found guilty against the State. Alas! exclaimed the poor girl, I know it, sire; but I do not ask for justice, I implore pardon. I beseech you to forgive my father! After a momentary struggle of feeling, Napoleon gently took the hand of the young maiden, and said, Well, my child, for your sake I will pardon your father. That is enough. Now leave me.

The value of pardon

A man named John Welsh lay in prison in Chicago under sentence of death. His friends tried to get his sentence commuted to imprisonment for life. The day before that fixed for his execution arrived without any favourable reply being received. The prisoner sat in his cell listening and longing earnestly for a respite. Presently he heard the rumbling of a car. It brought the materials for the scaffold, and soon he heard the stroke of the hammers, and pictured himself hanging on the scaffold he could hear them raising. The sound almost drove him frantic, and he begged that he might be taken anywhere away from the dreadful noise. He was taken to a distant cell, and there he sat on the edge of his bed, haunted with gloomy thoughts, all hope gone. He was startled from his reverie by a hurried step along the corridor. The key was thrust into the lock, and one of the officers of the prison stood before him. He held in his hand a paper signed by the Governor of the State of Illinois. It was a commutation of his sentence. How the truth burst upon his mind! When the paper was handed to him he could not read it for tears, but it was a paper bringing him his life, and he hugged it and kissed it. (H. W. Taylor.)

Forgiveness and remission of sins

Strictly speaking it is not sins that are forgiven, but their penalty. All men know what to give is; but what is it to for-give? To forth-give or give forth. When a man in ancient times forgave, he gave forth from himself something he was entitled to retain. When a man does injury to another he is liable to a penalty, and formerly every penalty short of death consisted of valuable material such as live cattle or money; and it was that, laid at the injured persons feet, that was given forth from the receiver, when he was willing to forgive the injurer. Precisely speaking it was not the injury that was forth-given; the injury was never at the disposal of the injured person. It was the penalty incurred by the injury that was forth-given. And whatever the penalty might be, though death itself, if it was not exacted it was forgiven. So when God forgives He generously refrains from exacting the penalty we have incurred. Another word is remission, which is a beautiful variation. There is mission in it. When any one is sent forth some end is contemplated. That end is his mission. Re of course means back. To remit is to send back. In ancient times when the material of the penalty of a transgression was sent to the injured person, he had it in his option graciously to send it back. That was the remission of the penalty of the sin. The phrase is now condensed, and we speak not only of the remission of the penalty, but of the remission of the sin. The expression is practically equivalent in Biblical representation to the word redemption, so that the two phrases reciprocally throw light on each other. In this light it is seen that, as a matter of principle, it must always be a difficulty in moral government to give scope to the forgiveness of crimes, or the remission of the penalty of transgressions. No wonder, therefore, that there should be difficulty in the Divine government. (J. Morison, D. D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 14. In whom we have redemption] Who has paid down the redemption price, even his own blood, that our sins might be cancelled, and we made fit to be partakers of the inheritance among the saints in light.

The clause, , Through his blood, is omitted by ABCDEFG, and by most others of weight and importance; by the Syriac, Arabic of Erpen, Coptic, AEthiopic, Sahidic, some copies of the Vulgate and by the Itala; and by most of the Greek fathers. Griesbach has left it out of the text. It is likely that the reading here is not genuine; yet that we have redemption any other way than through the sacrifice of Christ, the Scriptures declare not. The same phrase is used Eph 1:7, where there is no various reading in any of the MSS., versions, or fathers.

The forgiveness of sins] . The taking away of sins; all the power, guilt, and infection of sin. All sin of every kind, with all its influence and consequences.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

In whom; i.e. in the person of Christ alone God-man, deputed of his Father to die for our salvation, Act 4:12; 20:28.

We; as we are in him, made meet, Col 1:12.

Have redemption; we have eternal deliverance, Heb 9:12, effected by a full ransom paid, 1Co 6:20; 7:23; 1Pe 1:18,19. For the freeing us indeed out of a state of sin and misery, Joh 8:36, or eternal death the wages of sin, Rom 6:23; 16:20; so that by redemption here is not meant barely laying down the price, Luk 2:38, nor consummate redemption at the last, Eph 1:14; 4:30, but efficacious redemption.

Through his blood; upon the account of Christs offering himself an expiatory sacrifice to God, without which is no remission, Heb 9:22; Rev 5:9; effusion of his blood, by a synecdoche, takes in his humiliation to the death of the cross, and the pains of the second death he underwent for us, Isa 53:5,6; Ac 2:24; Gal 3:13; Phi 2:8.

Even the forgiveness of sins; plenary remission of offences is by apposition to, or follows, redemption as a necessary effect, Col 2:13; Luk 1:77; Act 10:43, by a metonymy transferring the cause to the effect: to see more: See Poole on “Eph 1:7“.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

14. (Eph1:7.)

redemptionrather asGreek,our redemption.”

through his bloodomittedin the oldest manuscripts; probably inserted from Eph1:7.

sinsTranslate asGreek,our sins.” The more general term: forwhich Eph 1:7, Greek,has, “our transgressions,” the more special term.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

In whom we have redemption,…. Which is an excellent and wonderful blessing of grace saints have in and by Christ; and lies in a deliverance from sin, all sin, original and actual, under which they are held captive, in a state of nature, and by which they are made subject to the punishment of death; but through the sacrifice of Christ it is taken, and put away, finished, and made an end of; and they are freed from the damning power of it, or any obligation to punishment for it; and in consequence of this are delivered from the enslaving governing power of it by his grace and Spirit, and will hereafter be entirely rid of the very being of it: it consists also of a deliverance from the law, the curse and bondage of it, under which they are held on account of sin, the transgression of it; but being delivered from sin, they are also from the law, its accusations, charges, menaces, curses, and condemnation; as likewise out of the hands of Satan, by whom they are led captive; for through the ransom price paid by Christ they are ransomed out of the hands of him that was stronger than they, the prey is taken from the mighty, and the lawful captive delivered by him that has led captivity captive: in short, this redemption is a deliverance out of the hands of all their enemies, and from all evils and misery, the effects of sin, from death, and hell, and wrath to come. The author of it is Christ, the Son of God, the Son of his love, his dear Son: he was called to this work in the council of peace, in which the affair of redemption was consulted; and he agreed to undertake it in the covenant of grace, of which this is a principal article; and being in his constitution, as Mediator, every way fit and proper for it: as man, the right of redemption belonged to him, being the near kinsman of his people, and, as God, he was mighty and able to perform it; as man he had something to offer, and, as God, could make that sacrifice valuable and effectual to all saving purposes; as man, he had compassion on human nature, and, as God, was concerned for things pertaining to his honour and glory. And thus being every way qualified, he was sent, and came on this errand, and has obtained a redemption, which is precious, plenteous, complete and eternal: it is now with him, and “in him”; and he is made this, and everything else to his people, that they want. The subjects of this blessing are, not angels, but men; and not all men, but some that are redeemed from among men, out of every kindred, tongue, people, and nation; who are called by the name of Jacob, the people of Christ, a peculiar people, and the church of God; and evidentially are such, who have faith in Christ, love to the saints, and good hope of eternal life; who know the grace of God in truth, are made meet to be partakers of the eternal inheritance, being delivered from the power of darkness, and translated into the kingdom of Christ, and are designed by the we in this text: the means by which this blessing is procured, is

through his blood. This phrase is left out indeed in the Syriac and Ethiopic versions, and in the Complutensian edition, and in some copies; but rightly stands here, as it does in Eph 1:7, where there is another clause added, which is here omitted, at the end of the verse, “according to the riches of his grace”. This is the blood of Christ, his own blood, and not the blood of bulls and goats, and the same with that of the persons he redeems, but untainted with sin; the blood of Christ, as of a lamb without spot and blemish, of original or actual sin, otherwise it would not have been a sufficient redemption price for his people; nor even then, were it not as it was the blood of the Son of God, of one that was God as well as man, whereby it came to have a proper value and efficacy in it to obtain this blessing: Christ’s shedding his blood freely on this account is a proof of his great love to his redeemed ones; the efficacy that was in it to answer this purpose shows the dignity and greatness of his person; and it not being to be effected without it, demonstrates the strictness of divine justice, and that the redemption of men is brought about in a way entirely consistent with the righteousness and holiness of God. A particular branch of this blessing follows, and which serves, in some sense, to illustrate and explain it,

[even] the forgiveness of sins; of all sin, original and actual; of heart, lip, and life, secret and open, past, present, and to come; which lies in a non-imputation of sin, a remembrance of it no more, a removing of it entirely out of the way, a covering and blotting it out of sight, so as to be no more visible and legible: this is in Christ, where all spiritual blessings are; nor is it to be had or expected from an absolute God, but from God in Christ, and through him, through his propitiatory sacrifice; for as redemption, so forgiveness of sin is through his blood, which was shed for it; so that it proceeds upon the foot of satisfaction made to the justice of God by a price paid, and is an act of justice as well as grace, and belongs to the same persons as redemption does; hence those that are redeemed are represented as without fault before the throne; and indeed, the reason why their iniquities are blotted out, and will be remembered no more against them, is, because they are redeemed.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

In whom ( ). In Christ as in Eph 1:7. This great sentence about Christ carries on by means of three relatives ( 14, 15, 18) and repeated personal pronoun (), twice with (Col 1:15; Col 1:19), thrice with (Col 1:17; Col 1:18; Col 1:20), twice alone (Col 1:16; Col 1:20).

Our redemption ( ). See on Ro 3:24 for this great word (Koine), a release on payment of a ransom for slave or debtor (Heb 9:15) as the inscriptions show (Deissmann, Light, etc., p. 327).

The forgiveness of our sins ( ). Accusative case in apposition with as in Eph 1:7 ( remission , sending away, , after the

redemption , buying back). Only here we have (sins, from , to miss) while in Eph 1:7 we find (slips, fallings aside, from ).

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

Redemption [] . See on Rom 3:24. Continuing the image of an enslaved and ransomed people. Omit through His blood.

Forgiveness [] . See on remission, Rom 3:25; forgiven, Jas 5:15. Forgiveness defines redemption. Lightfoot’s suggestion is very interesting that this precise definition may convey an allusion to the perversion of the term ajpolutrwsiv by the Gnostics of a later age, and which was possibly foreshadowed in the teaching of the Colossian heretics. The Gnostics used it to signify the result of initiation into certain mysteries. Lightfoot quotes from Irenaeus the baptismal formula of the Marcosians 186 “into unity and redemption [] and communion of powers.” The idea of a redemption of the world, and (in a perverted form) of the person and work of Christ as having part in it, distinctively marked the Gnostic schools. That from which the world was redeemed, however; was not sin, in the proper sense of the term, but something inherent in the constitution of the world itself, and therefore due to its Creator.

In the following passage the person of Christ is defined as related to God and to creation; and absolute supremacy is claimed for Him. See Introduction to this volume, and compare Eph 1:20 – 23, and Phi 2:6 – 11.

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) “In whom we have redemption” (en ho echomen ten apolutrosin) “in whom we have, hold, or possess the redemption or deliverance.” This redemption or deliverance is (exists) in, by, and through the Lord Jesus Christ. If we possess Christ, in him we possess redemption. Redemption is ransom by an agreed payment price. Mar 10:45. Jesus paid the price to ransom our souls from death.

2) “Through his blood,” Omit this for it is not in better manuscripts, considered to be an interpolation, yet the truth is clearly stated later, Col 1:20; Eph 1:7.

3) “Even the forgiveness of sins” (ten aphesin ton hamartion) “The forgiveness of the (our) sins.” Tit 2:14; 1Pe 1:16; 1Pe 1:19; Act 5:31; Act 13:38; Act 26:18.

NOT DEPENDENT ON FEELINGS

Someone asked Luther, “Do you feel that you have been forgiven?”

He answered, “No, but I’m assure As there’s a God in Heaven.

For feelings come, and feelings go, And feelings are deceiving.

My warrant is the Word of God,

Naught else is worth believing.

Weekly

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

14. In whom we have redemption. He now proceeds to set forth in order, that all parts of our salvation are contained in Christ, and that he alone ought to shine forth, and to be seen conspicuous above all creatures, inasmuch as he is the beginning and end of all things. In the first place, he says that we have redemption (300) and immediately explains it as meaning the remission of sins; for these two things agree together by apposition (301) For, unquestionably, when God remits our transgressions, he exempts us from condemnation to eternal death. This is our liberty, this our glorying in the face of death — that our sins are not imputed to us. He says that this redemption was procured through the blood of Christ, for by the sacrifice of his death all the sins of the world have been expiated. Let us, therefore, bear in mind, that this is the sole price of reconciliation, and that all the trifling of Papists as to satisfactions is blasphemy. (302)

(300) “ Redemption et deliurance;” — “Redemption and deliverance.”

(301) The following explanation of the meaning of the term apposition is furnished in a marginal note in our author’s French version: “ C’est quand deux noms substantifs appartenans a vne mesme chose, sont mis ensemble sans conionction, comme par declaration l’vn et l’autre;” — “This is when two substantive nouns, relating to the same thing, are placed together without being conjoined, as if by way of explanation, the one and the other.”

(302) “ Blasphemes execrables;” — “Execrable blasphemies.”

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

Outline of 1:1423

B.

CHRISTHis supremacy and work; Col. 1:14-23

1.

In Christ we have redemption; Col. 1:14

2.

Christ is the image of God; Col. 1:15

3.

Christ is the firstborn of all creation; Col. 1:15 b16

a.

Because in him all things were created

b.

Through him and unto him all were created

4.

Christ is before all things; Col. 1:17 a

5.

In Christ all things consist; Col. 1:17 b

6.

Christ is head of the body; Col. 1:18 a

7.

Christ is the beginning; Col. 1:18 b

8.

Christ is the firstborn from the dead; Col. 1:18 c

9.

What Gods good pleasure decided concerning Christ; Col. 1:19-23

a.

All the fulness would dwell in him; Col. 1:19

b.

He would reconcile all things; Col. 1:20-23

(1)

Who?Things in heaven and earth; Col. 1:20

(2)

Need for reconciliationalienation; Col. 1:21

(3)

How?By Christs death; Col. 1:22

(4)

Goal of reconciliationTo present men perfect; Col. 1:22-23

(a)

Condition for presentation: that we continue in the gospel; Col. 1:23

[1]

The gospel was preached in all creation

[2]

Paul was made a minister of the gospel

14. in whom we have our redemption, the forgiveness of our sins:

Translation and Paraphrase

14. (The Son is he) in whom we have redemption, (we are bought back from the slavery of sin; and our redemption is provided to us by) the forgiveness of (our) sins;

Notes

1.

Col. 1:14 begins a new section in our outline (Col. 1:14-23), which deals with the supremacy and preeminence of Christ. Many things are listed which indicate his supremacy. Some of these involve his work; some involve his nature; some involve his offices. They all show that in all things he has preeminence. (Col. 1:18). Here we see very plainly what was stated in our introductory studies, that Colossians is the most Christ-centered epistle in the New Testament.

2.

We have redemption in Christ, and from no other source. Redemption is the act of buying back something that has been sold. We sold ourselves into condemnation in order to practice sin. (1Ki. 21:20). Christ bought us back, not with decaying material wealth like silver and gold, but with his own precious blood. 1Pe. 1:18-19. He gave his life that we might live with God.

3.

All of this Bible teaching about redemption sounds ridiculous to modern modes of thinking. Instead of accepting the truth that we are sold into sin, this generation thinks it owns and controls everything. But our need for redemption is solidly based on the infinite holiness, justice, and love of God. Gods holiness cannot tolerate our sin. His justice and law requires that a life be given for a life forfeited by sin. His love caused him to send his only begotten son into the world to suffer the penalty due to sinners, that whosoever believes on him should not perish, but have everlasting life.

4.

Our redemption is identified as being the forgiveness of our sins. Forgiveness of sins stands in apposition to redemption. Redemption and forgiveness of sins are the same work of Christ, viewed from two points. When we speak of redemption, we emphasize our helpless condition and Christs act of buying us back. When we speak of forgiveness, we emphasize our own guilt in the matter. Eph. 1:7.

Study and Review

1.

What is the topic of Col. 1:14-23 that is given in our outline?

2.

In whom do we have our redemption? (Col. 1:14)

3.

Define the word redemption. From what are we redeemed?

4.

What is the relation of redemption to forgiveness of sins?

Fuente: College Press Bible Study Textbook Series

14. In whom All human redemption from deserved punishment and wrath is in Christ; in what he is and has done, and only in union with him, is it possessed. The Redeemer, whose shed blood is the ransom price, is Lord and King in this kingdom, in which he reigns supreme. In this verse we have a transition to a grand description of the person and work of our Lord. Its statement, that in the Son of God’s love we have the redemption, is, we conceive, the fundamental thought and theme of the epistle. Upon this proposition are based the pointed warnings against the errors which furnished the occasion of writing. The phrase through his Blood, has no ancient authority: it is plainly borrowed from Eph 1:7.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Col 1:14. St. Paul having, in the 13th verse, mentioned God’s dear Son, he here, accordingtohisusualmanner,runsoutimmediatelyintoadigressionconcerning him; but it is such a digression as is very much to his main purpose; viz. to establish them in their adherence to Christ, and to make them sensible how unreasonable their attempt was, who endeavoured to seduce them from him. Nothingcould be said more proper for this end, than what he here says, to shew the pre-eminence and headship of Christ, in all respects, even infinitely above the angels, whom some would have persuaded them to worship; and to set forth his transcendent excellency, and the greatness of the advantages which the Gentiles received by him. See the Inferences and Reflections.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Col 1:14 . Not a preliminary condition of the (de Wette), nor the benefit of which Christians become partakers in the kingdom of the Son of God (Huther; against which it may be urged that the does not denote the kingdom of the church ); nor yet a mark of the deliverance from darkness having taken place (Ritschl in the Jahrb. f. Deutsche Theol . 1863, p. 513), since this deliverance necessarily coincides with the translation into the kingdom; but it is the abiding ( , habemus , not accepimus ) relation, in which that transference into the kingdom of God has its causal basis . The ransoming (from the punishment of sin, see the explanatory .) we have in Christ , inasmuch as He, by the shedding of His blood as the purchase-price (see on 1Co 6:20 ; Gal 3:13 ; Gal 4:5 ), has given Himself as a (Mat 20:28 ; Mar 10:45 ; 1Ti 2:6 ); and this redemption, effected by His (Rom 3:21 ff.), remains continually in subsistence and efficacy. Hence: , which specifies wherein the subjective is objectively based, as its causa meritoria (Rom 3:24 ). Comp., moreover, on Eph 1:7 , whence has found its way hither as a correct gloss. But the deleting of this addition by no means implies that we should make also belong to (Hofmann), as in Heb 9:15 , especially as Paul elsewhere only uses either absolutely (Rom 3:24 ; 1Co 1:30 ; Eph 1:7 ; Eph 4:30 ) or with the genitive of the subject (Rom 8:23 ; Eph 1:14 ). The expression . . is not used by him elsewhere in the epistles (comp., however, Rom 4:7 ), but at Act 13:38 ; Act 26:28 . Holtzmann too hastily infers that the writer had read the Synoptics.

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

(14) In whom we have redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of sins: (15) Who is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of every creature: (16) For by him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by him, and for him: (17) And he is before all things, and by him all things consist. (18) And he is the head of the body, the church: who is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead; that in all things he might have the preeminence. (19) For it pleased the Father that in him should all fullness dwell; (20) And, having made peace through the blood of his cross, by him to reconcile all things unto himself; by him, I say, whether they be things in earth, or things in heaven.

At this verse we enter upon one of the most sublime subjects which God the Holy Ghost hath thought proper to bring before the Church, in his whole inspired writings. And I pray for grace to enter upon it with the most humble and profound reverence. The Apostle saith, that it refers to the mystery which hath been hid from ages and from generations, but now is made manifest to his saints. Reader! pause at the very entrance on it; and contemplate the distinguishing grace of God the Holy Ghost, in this infinite condescension. Think of his vast grace in the revelation. And then ponder his distinguishing love, in making this revelation known to his saints! And, if you and I can personally add, in our own instance! Oh! the grace of God!

When we consider how infinitely glorious the self-existing, and incomprehensible Jehovah is, in his threefold character of Person, dwelling eternally in his own glory; and, that that glory could receive no addition from the praises of his creatures, for all his divine perfections must have been the same; though man, or angel, never had been; but yet, for their happiness, in the contemplation of his glory, he was pleased to go forth, in the manifestation of himself, in those various acts, whereby the Lord might be known, in the several departments of nature, providence, grace; and glory: I say, when we consider Jehovah in this view, and stand impressed with this conviction no less on our minds, that the making some manifestation of this his glory to his Church, which he chose in Christ before the world began, is the sole cause, for which that Church is called into being, and all the after acts of creation took place; what an holy awe, and profound reverence, do such thoughts beget in the soul? From hence, it plainly appears, that this Great, and Almighty Lord, being infinitely blessed in himself, and in the Personalities of his own nature and essence, raised up the magnificent structure of creation, in all its departments, to make the Church in Christ blessed in the knowledge of Himself. Joh 17:3 . So that, in the Person of God’s dear Son, he might unbosom himself, and come forth, as it were, from the invisibility of his Being: not to add to his glory, for that can receive no accession; but to make the Church happy in the suitable apprehension of Him! Joh 1:18 . What a subject is here opened to the contemplation? A child, of God, when regenerated in spirit, and raised from the Adam-fall of spiritual death, may, and can, in some measure, begin in this life the contemplation; but a. whole eternity will not be enough to fill in the infinite boundless subject!

The wonders of creation, in all its vast extent, led to the view; and the infinite holiness of the divine nature, in the forming our first Parents in a state of innocency, and holiness, opened the first volume in the wonderful decree. But, when the Church of God had read somewhat of the gracious pages herein, the Lord turned over to the vast mystery, which He, who alone was found worthy to open the book and loose the seals, came to disclose; Rev 5:1Rev 10:1 ; Psa 2:7 , and the Church began to learn, what angels had never been taught, of the mysterious union, of God and man in one Person, with all the vast concerns involved therein, in the unsearchable riches of Christ!

In this Chapter, and at the opening of those verses, God the Spirit graciously directed the mind of his servant the Apostle, to give the Church some of the great outlines of this subject. Not to gratify curiosity, but to awaken the most humble and godly reverence; not to pry into mysteries which are unfathomable, but to beget holy faith, and love. And, under the Lord the Holy Ghost, the Apostle hath given to the Church, some of the several parts of this deep, and mysterious subject, one by one, as are enough, when God the Spirit gives his enlightening blessing with them, to raise up in the soul of the faithful, a joy unspeakable, and full of glory. The best service I can propose in this Poor Man’s Commentary, will be to follow the footsteps of the Apostle, in the several features which he hath here marked, in those verses, of the Person of Christ, and of the office-characters in which he hath drawn him; from whence, if the Lord be graciously pleased to bless the review, both Writer, and Reader, may be benefited together.

And first. He describes his Person. He stiles him the Image of the invisible God. Not as God only, far there can be nothing visible in God. And his express character is, the King eternal, immortal, invisible, 1Ti 1:17 . And He is said, to dwell in the light which no man can approach unto; whom no man hath seen, or can see, 1Ti 6:16 . So that, when the Holy Scriptures at any time speak of God in his threefold character of Person, they invariably speak of Him in this invisibility of essence. The mode of their existence is perfectly inconceivable. It never can be attained by any created faculties. The very nature of God would cease to be incomprehensible (which is his distinguishing property,) if brought any way down to the comprehension of anything finite. When, therefore, Christ is said, as in this blessed Scripture, to be the image of the invisible God; it is not spoken of him, as God only: for God cannot be visible. In all his substance as God, he is invisible. Neither can it be said of Christ as man only. For the human nature alone, could never represent the Godhead. But, if the Son of God will condescend to take into union with himself an holy portion of human nature, (which to his eternal praise, and his Church’s everlasting happiness, he hath done,) then in both he becomes the image of the invisible God, subsisting in this twofold nature, as that blessed Scripture expresses it: For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily. Col 2:9 . The Apostle goes on, and calls him the first born of every creature. And this throws a light upon what went before. The first born, that is, in this vast plan, of Jehovah’s mind. Indeed, both the first, and last, in all God’s thoughts; and hence called the Alpha, and Omega. So Jesus called himself; Rev 1:17Rev 1:17 , compared with Rev 22:13 . Not in the open manifestation of himself, when he tabernacled in substance of our flesh, in what is called the fulness of time; Gal 4:4 , but as subsisting in Covenant engagements, he became the first born to represent the invisible God; and the models or pattern, of all to be represented, in the after circumstances of the creation of man. Hence, at the creation of Adam, in the Council of Jehovah, it was said; Let us make man in our image after our likeness: Gen 1:26 , that is, after the likeness of Him who is the image of the invisible God; namely, Man subsisting in covenant-characters in the Son of God. And thus, God and man, in one Mediator, possessed of Jehovah in the beginning of his ways, set up from everlasting, Pro 8:22-23 .

Thirdly. From hence, the Apostle proceeds to enumerate some of the actions of Christ, in this God-man representation, as the image of the invisible God. By him mere all things created that are in heaven, and that are in earth: visible, and invisible; whither they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by him. Pause! – What a manifest display here is, of everything which can demonstrate supreme power? As God, He in whom this Image of the invisible God subsisted, was, and is, one in the essence of the Godhead, with the Father and the Holy Ghost; and, therefore, in common with the Father and the Holy Ghost, is the Creator of all things. And as Man, taken into Covenant engagements, became the Image, or Pattern, of whom the creation in human nature, was to be made like. This secret One was thus, in representation, the Image of the invisible God, and subsisting secretly in Covenant engagements for this express purpose. Hence it is said, that God created all things by Jesus Christ. Eph 3:9 .

Fourthly, The Apostle adds, that not only all things were created by him, but for him. Here opens another striking particularity of the greatness of Christ’s Person. And, this is not spoken of him as God only; for in that case, the observation would have been unnecessary. Neither can it be in allusion to his manhood only. For in this sense, it would not have been correct. But, if we view it in reference to both natures, God and man, Mediator; it is both scriptural, and truly blessed. For Jehovah hath given him all things as God-Man-Mediator; Joh 3:35 , and given him to be the head over all things to the Church, which is his body, the fullness of him that filleth all in all. Eph 1:22-23 .

Fifthly. He is said to be before all things, and by him all things consist. The observations going before, plainly prove his priority to all things as Creator. So that, on this we need not enlarge, But, when it is also said, that by him all things consist; there is a beauty, and a blessedness in this expression, which demands somewhat more particularly to be remarked. By him all things consist: that is, as God-Man-Mediator. A somewhat to mediate, to come between the Creator, and the created. For the union of those natures rendered it necessary, in order for the works of creation to hang upon, or to consist in. Very certain it must be, to common sense, that nothing which is of creature-being, and no more, can have union with the Godhead. It cannot stand in connection with the Godhead. And very certain it is, that nothing of mere creature-being, and no more, can stand in being alone, independent of God. Hence, in the Person of the GOD-Man Christ Jesus, in this twofold nature, there is found in him, and in him only, an adequate foundation to rest upon, and to have union with. And hence it is most blessedly said, that Christ is not only before all things, but by him all things consist.

Reader! I detain you for one short moment over this view of Christ, by whom all things consist, to consider, how eternally safe and secure, and how eternally blessed, and happy, must every individual member of his mystical body be, while all hang upon him, and all consist by him. Precious Jesus! how can the body perish, while the Head lives? How can Jesus’s members be otherwise than blessed, while living in, and living upon Jesus?

Sixthly. Paul cannot give over. He speaks again of Christ; and now in his headship. He is the Head of the body the Church. He hath married our nature, our persons, hath come into the tenderest alliances with us, made us members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones. All communications from him, are in, and from, the human nature of our Lord: so that, while his Godhead gives a fulness and a blessedness, to every token shewn; his manhood gives it an human sweetness, to make all the blessings also of the man, the God-man Christ Jesus.

And lastly: (for I must not trespass to add more,) Paul puts a blessed emphasis on the whole, in declaring, that he is the firstborn from the dead also, as well as the first born of every creature: that as, in his Mediator-character, he is the first, in all Jehovah’s designs; so he must be the last in all his appointments. None shall come before. None shall remain after. As Jesus saith himself: I am Alpha, and Omega; the beginning, and the ending, saith the Lord which is, which was, and which is to come. Rev 1:8 . Reader! contemplate the glories of his Person, of whom such glorious things are said! Jesus! to thee, shall every knee bow, and every tongue confess, that thou art Lord, to the glory of God the Father! Phi 2:10-11 .

Having now, in as expeditious a manner as possible, followed the footsteps of the Apostle, in his description of Christ’s Person; I would next, as I proposed, prosecute what he hath marked of those office-characters, in which he hath drawn him.

And first. Let us take notice of Christ’s fulness. For it pleased the Father that in him .should all fulness dwell. The Reader will observe, that the words the Father, are in italics. By which is meant, that they are not in the original. But our Translators have very properly introduced them; because, though all the Persons of the Godhead are engaged in Covenant purposes, in all things relating to Christ, and his Church; yet, it is among the special and personal offices of the Father, as appears from other pans of Scripture, the giving all things into the hands of Christ. His is to give both the Church and all spiritual blessings for the Church to Christ. Joh 17:6Joh 17:6 .

In regard to the fulness here spoken of, as dwelling in Christ; care must always be had, to consider it in relation wholly to his Person, and office-character, as Mediator. For, as God, in his divine nature, and essence; all fulness, yea, all divine perfections, are his, in common with the Father, and the Holy Ghost. Nothing can be said to be given to him in this sense, for they are his own eternally. But the Mediator-fulness, is given to him for the Church, which is his body; and in this character of headship, his is the fulness, that filleth all in all. Eph 1:17 , to the end. Reader! pause over the contemplation, for it is most blessed. A fulness in himself, as God-Man-Mediator. A fulness of temporal, spiritual, and eternal blessings, to impart to his body the Church. A mediator-fulness, as the everlasting Lord of all creation, to rule over, and direct, in all the departments of nature, providence, grace, and glory. So that, while the Lord Jesus is in a special, and personal manner, the Head of his body the Church, for grace here, and glory forever; he is the head of all principality, and power: Eph 1:22 , and, as the Prophet described him, his dominion is an everlasting dominion, and his kingdom, that which shall be forever. Dan 4:34-35Dan 4:34-35 ; Rev 5:13 .

The Reader will not expect me to enter into a description of this all fulness, which it hath pleased the Father, to invest his dear Son as Mediator with. This exceeds all the powers of the imagination, to conceive. And no pen, or tongue, or angel, could describe, or make up the vast arithmetic, in calculation. But every child of God, in the circumstances of his own life, should be forever, like the Prophet on his watch-tower, observing the unceasing tendencies of the Lord’s manifestation to himself. And if he were, what an huge volume might a short life record, of the continual love-tokens, which Jesus sends his redeemed, when receiving out of his fulness, and grace for grace. Hab 2:1 ; Joh 1:16 .

Secondly. Paul speaks of another office of Christ, namely, redemption; the great purpose which brought him from heaven. The Apostle, indeed, began his account of Christ’s Person with this, in the opening of this paragraph, when he said: In whom we have redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of sins. And here again, in the close of the sentence, he dwells upon the same soul-reviving subject most blessedly, when saying: And having made peace through the blood of his cross, by him to reconcile all things unto himself: by him, I say, whether they be things on earth, or things, in heaven. I must entreat the Reader to observe with me, with what emphasis the Holy Ghost holds forth to the Church, this vast work of the Lord Jesus. Redemption is Christ’s own personal labors, and sufferings. It is to his own personal glory, and honor. The work is all his own. The glory his. And God the Holy Ghost is unceasingly-impressing the sense of it upon the Church. It was taught the Prophet in a vision, ages before Christ became incarnate, when he saw him coining up as a mighty conqueror from the war; and yet, as a servant, treading the wine-press. It was Christ alone, which trod the wine-press of the wrath of God. And of the people there was none with him, Isa 63:1-6 ; Rev 19:15-16 .

And, I beg the Reader to observe yet further, how strong an emphasis is laid on the word him, by him I say, saith the Apostle. We have a similar expression, Eph 1:10 . And the design is to shew, the special, peculiar, and personal fitness of Christ, as God-Man-Mediator, to this work of redemption. For, if it could be supposed possible, that any other but the Son of God in our nature, could have accomplished redemption; by so much would it have lessened the greatness of his love, and ability, in doing that, which another could do. So that, it forms a special feature in the Person of our adorable Emanuel, that in Him alone, we find One mighty to save, Act 4:12 . If the Reader will turn to Heb 1:3 , he will find a similar precious testimony, to this most blessed truth, that Christ, by himself, purged our sins. And, as in the redemption of his people; so in the destruction of his, and their enemies, it is his triumphs over them in it, or as it should have been rendered, (and is indeed, in the margin of the Bible,) in himself; meaning, his own personal triumphs over them, Col 2:13 . Oh! what wonders are found, in the Person of the Lord Jesus Christ! Oh! the triumphs of his offices, and grace!

Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

“Handfuls of Purpose”

For All Gleaners

“In whom we have redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of sins. Who is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of every creature: for by him were all things created that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by hint, and for him: and he is before all things, and by him all things consist.” (Col 1:14-15 , Col 1:16-17 ).

The Apostle has never ascended to a higher intellectual and spiritual elevation. Recognising Christ as the “image” of the invisible God, we are not to understand the Apostle as using the word “image” as equal to shadow or outline, but rather as a distinct representation of God himself. There may be likeness without embodiment. There may be the suggestion of a likeness without anything beyond. In this case, however, the word “image” is to be understood as expressing the highest degree of vivid and actual personality. To Paul, Christ was the embodied God. When the Apostle regards Christ as “the firstborn of every creature,” or of all creation, we are to understand that he was begotten before all creation; that he was indeed the very reason of the creation of the universe; that without Christ the universe would have been an impossibility or an abortion. The explanation of everything therefore is, according to the Apostle’s idea, to be found in the personality, the ministry, and the whole purpose of Christ. Christ was begotten, not created. Here we enter upon mysteries at which human language can but dimly hint. We regard Jesus Christ as Emmanuel, God with us. We regard him as slain before the foundation of the world, and therefore as prepared for all the evolution of human sin, and all the need of human life. Christ is not to be understood as coming into history at a given point to meet a specific emergency: He is to be regarded as existing before all history, and is to be accepted as the key of the whole drama of human birth, development, and destiny. All things were created through Christ and for Christ. “For by him were all things created;” and again, “From him, and through him, and to him, are all things”; and again, “by whom are all things, and for whom are all things.” Paul here gives us the key of the universe. We may approach the enigma of creation from various points, and we shall end all our investigations with a sense of chagrin and failure, if we neglect to associate the whole economy of things with the name and power of Christ. To be truly theological, therefore, is to be truly scientific. To have a clear conception of all that is meant by the term “Christ” is to have a correspondingly clear conception of all that is meant by the term “universe.” Men persist, however, in working from the outside, instead of working from the centre. We can easily see the possibility of endless and ruinous mistakes by this inversion of the law of progress. Where we are not at first permitted to come upon the central mystery, we may reverently work from the circumference, in the hope that in due time we shall see the glory of the centre. In the case of Christianity, however, we are distinctly invited to begin with Christ; to begin with him at any point of his marvellous career; and we are assured that only in proportion as we look at all things through Christ can we understand their unity and their meaning. Paul sets Christ not only above all divinely created glories, magnitudes, and splendours of every kind, but he sets him above all thrones and dominions, and principalities and powers, whether they are human, or whether they represent heavenly bodies, or stellar spaces and splendour. What a different view of the universe we have when regarding it from the Person of Jesus Christ! Now we see all things ordered and ruled as by a beneficent purpose. The Saviour is the Creator. He who suffered most rules most. The object of all this constitution and all this government is to develop man according to the divine ideal, to perfect him in all strength, stature, beauty, force, and excellence. Man is made but a little lower than the angels. We see him in the midst of his development, and it is like seeing a half-painted picture or an unfinished building; much there is that is rude, shapeless, provocative of hostile criticism, or suggestive of ill-natured and querulous interrogation; but here we have the promise that all things shall be made glorious and beautiful, as is the person of Christ. In this hope we suffer individually; in this confidence we toil collectively; in this blessed belief we offer every prayer, assured that the grand Amen will be realised in the ages to come according to the purpose of God. The Apostle now turns to a smaller theocracy:

Fuente: The People’s Bible by Joseph Parker

14 In whom we have redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of sins:

Ver. 14. Even the forgiveness, &c. ] See Trapp on “ Mat 1:21 Sin is the greatest evil; as that which sets us farthest from God the chiefest good; and as that which procureth and embittereth all other evils that befall us. Christ therefore redeemeth his “Israel from their iniquities,” Psa 130:8 ; he crosseth out of God’s debtbook the black lines of their sins with the red lines of his own blood, and so “redeemeth his Israel out of all their troubles,” Psa 25:22 .

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

14 20 .] Description, introduced by the foregoing, of the pre-eminence and majesty of the Son of God, our Redeemer .

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

14 .] In whom (as its conditional element: as in the frequent expressions, , , &c.: see the parallel, Eph 1:7 ) we have (see note, ibid.) Redemption (this is perhaps better, taking the art. as the idiomatic way of expressing the abstract subst., than our Redemption as in my earlier editions. See Ellic.), the remission (“on the distinction between and , see Trench, Synon. 33.” Ellic.) of our sins (note, Eph., ut supra. , the more special word, is here replaced by the more general: the meaning being the same):

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

Col 1:14 . This verse is parallel to Eph 1:7 . : not by whom, but in whom; if we possess Christ, we possess in Him our deliverance. : (present) we have as an abiding possession. : “deliverance”. The word is generally interpreted as ransom by payment of a price, for which Mar 10:45 , , may be compared. But it is not certain that the word ever has this meaning. It is very rare in Greek writers (see reff.). The passage from Plutarch refers to pirates holding cities to ransom. But obviously the word here does not mean that we procure release by paying a ransom. The word is often used simply in the sense of “deliverance,” the idea of ransom having disappeared. (So in Rom 8:23 , Eph 4:30 , Luk 21:28 .) It is best therefore to translate “deliverance” here, especially as this suits better the definition in the following words. The remission of sins is itself our deliverance, whereas it stands to the payment of the ransom as effect to cause. The elaborate discussion in Oltramare may be referred to for fuller details, with the criticism in Sanday and Headlam’s note on Rom 3:24 ; also Abbott on Eph 1:7 ; Westcott on Heb., pp. 295, 296; Ritschl, Rechtf. und Vershn . ii., 222 sq. . The similar definition of . in Eph 1:7 tells against Lightfoot’s view that it is added here against erroneous definitions by the false teachers, who very probably did not employ the term. The precise phrase does not occur elsewhere in Paul. . . depends simply on . ., not, as Hofmann thinks, on it and . ., for the latter is not used with the object from which deliverance is effected.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

redemption. See Rom 3:24.

through His blood. All the texts omit. forgiveness, Compare Eph 1:7.

sins. App-128.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

14-20.] Description, introduced by the foregoing, of the pre-eminence and majesty of the Son of God, our Redeemer.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

Col 1:14. , in Whom) the Son, Eph 1:7.- , the redemption) This is treated of, Col 1:18 (from the middle) and in the following verse.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

redemption

(See Scofield “Rom 3:24”).

Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes

whom: Mat 20:28, Act 20:28, Rom 3:24, Rom 3:25, Gal 3:13, Eph 1:7, Eph 5:2, 1Ti 2:6, Tit 2:14, Heb 9:12, Heb 9:22, Heb 10:12-14, 1Pe 1:19, 1Pe 1:20, 1Pe 3:18, 1Jo 2:2, Rev 1:5, Rev 5:9, Rev 14:4

the: Col 2:13, Col 3:13, Psa 32:1, Psa 32:2, Psa 130:4, Luk 5:20, Luk 7:47-50, Act 2:38, Act 10:43, Act 13:38, Act 13:39, Act 26:18, Rom 4:6-8, Eph 4:32, 1Jo 1:9, 1Jo 2:12

Reciprocal: Lev 4:35 – and the priest shall make Lev 17:11 – I have Isa 53:12 – will I Zec 9:11 – I have Mat 6:33 – the kingdom Mat 26:28 – shed Act 5:31 – forgiveness 1Co 1:30 – redemption Eph 2:13 – are Heb 8:12 – General

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

(Col 1:14.) , -In whom we have redemption-the forgiveness of sins. The words of the Received Text rest on no good authority, for the entire preponderance of authorities, manuscripts, versions, and quotations, is against them. The phrase is an imitation of Eph 1:7. Lachmann reads in the aorist, without sufficient grounds. The apostle could not speak of the Son without a reference to His redeeming work. The work of the Father has its own aspect, and so has the work of the Son. Our direct change of condition is ascribed to the Father, as the almighty and powerful dispenser of blessing; but we are said to be united to the Son, and so to be in Him as to obtain redemption in the union-for by the price He paid forgiveness of sins is secured and conferred. This verse, then, does not merely describe a blessing-the enjoyment of which is indispensable to our preparation for heaven, and our removal from the realm of darkness, but it also and especially characterizes a continuous gift enjoyed by those who are settled in the kingdom of the Son. The subjects of His kingdom are in vital union with Him-in Him they are having redemption. Their translation out of the tyranny of darkness-their place in the new kingdom, and their growing maturity for heavenly bliss, are implied in this redemption, though its special element is the forgiveness of sins. Their first condition was one of guilt as well as gloom, and forgiveness was enjoyed in their emigration from it. Nor are they perfect under the benign reign of the Son, and as a state of imperfection is so far one of sin, it is in daily need of repeated pardon. The results of Christ’s work are fully enjoyed only in heaven-the process of redemption is there completed, and thus we are said still to be having it as long as we are on earth. The entire vers e has been fully illustrated under Eph 1:7. The difference of diction is unessential, being employed in Colossians, and in the Epistle to the Ephesians. One question not alluded to there may be here noticed, and that is, why forgiveness occupies in both places so prominent a place? It stands as an explanation of redemption, not as if it included the whole of it, but because-

1. It is a first and prominent blessing. So soon as faith springs up in the heart the pardon of sin is enjoyed-the results of expiation are conferred. This doctrine was placed in the front of apostolic preaching: Act 5:31; Act 13:38; Act 26:18; and among the Divine declarations and promises of the Old Testament, it occurs with cheering emphasis and repetition: Exo 34:7; Isa 40:2; Isa 55:7; Jer 33:8; Mic 7:18; Psa 85:2; Psa 103:3; and again and again it is announced as the result of accepted sacrifice in the Levitical law. And no wonder. So deep is man’s guilt, and so tremendous is the penalty; so agonized is his conscience, and so terrible are his forebodings; so utterly helpless and hopeless is his awful state without Divine interposition, that a free and perfect absolution from the sentence stands out not only as a blessing of indescribable grandeur and necessity, but as the first and welcome offer and characteristic of the gospel of Christ. And it is no sectional or partial blessing. It makes no distinction among sins, no discrimination among transgressors. Its circuit is complete, for every sin is included, and it is offered with unbounded freedom and invitation. No previous qualification is requisite, and no subsequent merit is anticipated. And as it is the act of the sovereign judge, who shall arraign its equity, or by what other authority can it be revoked or cancelled? Rom 8:33-34.

2. Forgiveness is more closely connected with redemption than any other blessing, as it is the only blessing enjoyed immediately from Christ, and as the direct result of His expiation. It springs at once from the which forms the centre and basis of the . Other blessings obtained for Christ’s sake are given through some appointed and dependent medium. Thus, peace is the effect of pardon; and holiness is the product of the Spirit and the word, as agent and instrument. But forgiveness passes through no intervention-it comes at once from the cross to the believing soul.

3. It is essentially bound up with subsequent gifts. Forgiveness precedes purity-there is change of state before there is change of heart. The Holy Ghost did not come down till Christ was glorified-till His expiatory oblation had been accepted. Being justified, believers are sanctified. The imputation of righteousness is a necessary pre-requisite to the infusion of holiness. The Spirit will not take up His abode in an unpardoned soul, and the sinner’s relation to the law must be changed ere his nature be renovated. At the same time, pardon and holiness are inseparably associated, and the remission of trespasses is the precursor of peace and joy, hope and life. So that, such being its nature, origin, and results, the apostle naturally places forgiveness of sins in apposition with redemption in Christ Jesus.

Having now spoken of Christ and the blessings secured by union to Him, the apostle, for obvious reasons, lingers on that Name round which crystallized all the doctrines he taught-all the truths of that theology which it was the one business of his life to proclaim.

The next verse begins a lofty and comprehensive paragraph, in which the dignity and rank of Christ are described in linked clauses of marvellous terseness and harmony. The apostle introduces the name of the Son on purpose, and then details in sweeping completeness the glory of His person and work. There is no doubt that the verses were composed in reference to modes of error prevalent at Colosse, and the forms of expression have their special origin, shape, and edge in this polemical reference. While the writer states absolute truth in rich and glowing accumulation of sentences, still, the thought and diction are so moulded as to bear against false dogmas which were in circulation. It is strange that in any system of theology the person of Christ should be depreciated, and His mediatorial work vailed and slighted. The spectacle, however, is not an uncommon one. Yet the apostles can scarcely find language of sufficient energy and lustre to tell in it the honour and majesty of the Redeemer. The sentences in which Paul describes the rank and prerogative of Christ are like a bursting torrent, dashing away every barrier in its impetuous race. How he exults in the precious theme, and how his soul swells into impassioned panegyric!

We do not know in what precise way the dignity of Jesus was vilified by the Colossian errorists. It would seem, indeed, that the germs of Gnosticism and Ebionitism were to be found in Colosse-denial of Christ’s actual humanity, and of His supreme divinity. The apostle, therefore, holds Him out as the one Supreme Creator, not only of the world, but of the universe, and declares that reconciliation is secured in the body of His flesh through death. Confused notions of the spirit-world appear also to have prevailed. Jesus was discrowned. The Lord of the angels was placed among the angels, as if he had been a selected delegate out of many illustrious compeers. That He was superhuman may not have been denied-but that He was truly human was more than questioned. That there had been a being of superior order upon earth was allowed, but whether as a veritable man he had blood to shed, and a soul and body to be severed in death and re-united in resurrection, appears to have been doubted or denied. Ascetic austerities, and mystical speculations, took the place of reliance on an objective atonement. The gospel was shorn of its simplicity, and mutilated in its adaptations, in order to be fitted in to the dogmas and announced in the specious nomenclature of a vain theosophy. That Jesus, as a celestial being, stood in a certain relation to God, and bore some similitude to Him, might be granted-but the likeness was thought to be faint and distant. The apostle affirms of Him in choice and expressive terms, on the other hand, Who is the image of the invisible God-

Fuente: Commentary on the Greek Text of Galatians, Ephesians, Colossians and Phillipians

Col 1:14. The pronoun whom refers to the Son, whose blood redeems men from the bondage of “darkness” as stated in the preceding verse. No man is free from the bondage of sin until something is done that can satisfy God, against whom all sin is regarded as being committed. That satisfaction can be accomplished only through the merits of the blood of Christ. When a sinner “obeys from the heart” (Rom 6:17) the doctrine or commandments of the Gospel, he is “then made free from sin,” which is what our present verse declares.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Col 1:14. In whom. Comp. Eph 1:7, which closely resembles this verse. Here, however, the phrase through His blood is to be rejected, since it is sustained by no ancient Greek manuscript.

The forgiveness of our sins. In Eph 1:7 : trespasses, which points more to the outward acts; the term sins is more general. Redemption and forgiveness are ours only in Christ.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

Here our apostle further declares how we are made meet for the inheritance of heaven, and delivered from the power of darkness, namely, by our redemption in Christ from sin, Satan, death and wrath; by a price paid by the Mediator, to the justice of God his Father. In whom we have redemption, that is, the fruit and benefit of Christ’s redemption, which eminently consists in remission of sin.

Note here, 1. The deplorable state into which the whole race of mankind was brought by sin, namely, a state of slavery, and spiritual captivity unto sin; redemption supposes this; slaves and captives need a Redeemer, none else.

2. That there was no delivery from this slavery, but by a price paid down to the justice of God: Redemption is a delivery by ransom and price.

3. That no other price did, or could redeem us from our miserable captivity, but the blood of Christ; we have redemption through his blood.

4. That although Christ did pay this ransom unto God, and not to Satan, whose enslaved captives we are, yet, by virtue of the ransom paid, we are delivered from Satan’s slavery, and sin’s dominion; when God the judge was once satisfied, Satan and the gaoler had nothing to do to detain and keep us any longer in prison.

5. That forgiveness of sin, or a full and final discharge from sin’s guilt, and from all obnoxiousness to God’s wrath, was one special fruit of Christ’s redemption; he died to deliver us from the wrath of God, and from the rage of our lusts too, otherwise he had but sealed us a patent to sin with impunity.

Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament

Verse 14

Through his blood; through his atoning sufferings.

Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament

“In whom we have redemption through his blood, [even] the forgiveness of sins:”

Redemption simply means to buy back or to pay a price. This is what Christ did on the cross – He paid the price for us. Not only did He purchase us – He made it possible for us to have forgiveness of our sins – both ongoing and past.

Don’t mind if I just stop and list some theological studies mentioned here.

Inheritance.

Delivery from Satan.

Translated into the kingdom.

Redemption.

Forgiveness of sins.

Not to speak of the Fatherhood of God, the Sonship of Christ.

No matter how some like to deride theology, the Bible is full of it!

1-15 seems to be looking at our salvation while 16-23 are looking at the provider of that salvation, our Savior. Paul is really laying it out for his reader – Christ is God – that is a sword to the body of Gnosticism. There is a God and He has provided for us.

Well maybe a little more theology. Some points raised to the point of the deity of Christ in the next section.

15. “image of the invisible God”

16. He created everything

17. Pre-existent/sustainer

18. head of the body – the church

19. fullness of God dwells in Him

20. reconciler

22. makes us free from accusation

Fuente: Mr. D’s Notes on Selected New Testament Books by Stanley Derickson

1:14 {6} In whom we have redemption through his blood, [even] the forgiveness of sins:

(6) The matter itself of our salvation is Christ the Son of God, who has obtained remission of sins for us by the offering up of himself.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

Perhaps Paul explained redemption because the false teachers were redefining that term too. Redemption is a benefit of union with Christ (Col 1:13 b). "Emancipation" expresses this aspect of Christ’s work for us.

"The real redemption [apolutrosis, lit. ransoming away] needed by men is not a redemption from fate by gnostic aeons [intermediate deities]; it is a redemption from sin by a Divine-human Mediator." [Note: Johnson, 472:345.]

 

"Redemption and forgiveness are not exactly parallel or identical concepts, but by putting the two terms in apposition to each other, the apostle teaches that the central feature of redemption is the forgiveness of sins." [Note: Vaughan, p. 180. ]

Forgiveness of sins is an important motif in this epistle (cf. Col 2:13; Col 3:13).

This pericope contains a beautiful picture of Christian growth that is God’s will for every believer. Paul alluded to the same concept later (Col 2:7). The Christian grows more as a fruit tree than as a stalk of wheat. We do not just bear fruit and then die. We continue to grow in our ability to bear fruit as we increase in the knowledge of God. Each passing year should see both growth in the Christian’s spiritual life and an increase in his or her fruitfulness.

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)