The Church's Identity and Calling: Rooted in Christ, Sustained by Grace
The Colossians are defined by God’s calling and Christ-union, and they are sustained by grace and peace from the Father.
A teaching guide through Colossians, shaped by biblical, Christ-centered, and cross-centered reading.
A teaching guide through Colossians, shaped by biblical, Christ-centered, and cross-centered reading.
Teaching paths help you move through the book with a clear purpose. Use the right rail to focus the chapter plan, or stay in the full book view to read every passage in canonical order.
Best for: church-wide formation, annual series, big-picture discipleship.
Each week can point to Study, and some weeks also link to an outline when one is available.
Paul argues that the gospel that came to the Colossians is the true word of God because it bears fruit, forms worthy lives, reveals the supremacy and sufficiency of Christ, reconciles alienated sinners, and drives apostolic ministry toward maturity in Christ.
The Colossians are defined by God’s calling and Christ-union, and they are sustained by grace and peace from the Father.
The true gospel inevitably produces faith in Christ, love for believers, and hope anchored in heaven.
Believers grow by knowing God’s will, walking worthily, and remembering they have been rescued into Christ’s kingdom.
Jesus Christ is preeminent in creation, sovereign in the church, and central in cosmic reconciliation.
Christ’s atoning death has reconciled formerly hostile sinners, and that reconciliation calls for steadfast faith.
Christ in believers is the revealed hope of glory, and faithful ministry labors to present every believer mature in Him.
Paul argues that Christ is sufficient for wisdom, fullness, forgiveness, triumph, holiness, and maturity; therefore, believers must not be captured by systems that add human tradition, ritual obligation, mystical experience, or ascetic severity to Christ.
Christ contains all true wisdom, and believers must stand firm in Him to resist persuasive deception.
Christ’s completed work makes spiritual supplementation unnecessary and spiritually dangerous.
External religious regulations cannot produce spiritual life that is found only in union with Christ.
Paul argues that Christian holiness is grounded in union with Christ. The believer's death and resurrection with Christ demand the killing of old-life sins, the wearing of new-life virtues, the rule of Christ's peace, the rich indwelling of Christ's word, and ordinary life lived in the name of the Lord Jesus.
Resurrection identity demands heavenly-minded orientation anchored in Christ’s reign.
Resurrection life requires the killing of old patterns and the embrace of renewed identity in Christ.
A Christ-centered community is marked by compassion, forgiveness, Word-saturation, peace, and gratitude.
Christ’s lordship reshapes marriage, parenting, and labor relationships into accountable, worshipful obedience.
Paul argues that the lordship of Christ reaches into power, prayer, mission, speech, ministry partnership, church fellowship, and personal endurance. A church rooted in Christ's supremacy does not become passive; it becomes prayerful, wise, gracious, accountable, and missionally alert.
A Christ-centered life expresses itself in vigilant prayer and wise, grace-filled engagement with outsiders.
Christ’s kingdom grows through interconnected, persevering believers committed to faithful ministry.