1-11. Agent of New Creation
1-11. Agent of New Creation
1-11. Agent of New Creation
COLOSSIANS 1:15-18
So when we come to Col0ssians 1:15-17 we get the same picture of Jesus as the
agent/creator of the new creation. This is because the NT looks forward to what is coming i.e.
the New Heavens and New Earth, that is, a new order of society and which will be based on
the new creation of godly people since Jesus sacrifice was made. This is why the
surrounding context of Col. 1:15-17 focuses on reconciliation of man to God through Jesus.
STRUCTURE
James Dunn (the leading christologist) reminds us that this is a pre-Pauline hymn, with
its language being poetical and not conceptual, made up of two strophes. He tells us that the
context indicates that:
the two strophes were not dealing with two clearly distinct subjects (cosmology and
soteriology).
The subject is, in fact, not that of the Genesis creation as Karl-Joseph Kuschel notes:
this text does not provide any encouragement for a hypostatization of Christ so that he
becomes an independent creator deity.
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TRANSLATION
This passage is most accurately examined from any of the following: an Interlinear
Translation, Rotherhams Emphasized Bible, Youngs Literal Translation or The New
American Bible. The use of the present tense indicates that this is about the exalted Christ.
The subject of these verses is the pre-eminence of Christ in his post-resurrection glory. This is
not about pre-existence but concerns Jesus at the time of writing after his exaltation.
....................
Verse 15a:
He is the image of the invisible God.
The present tense here indicates that Jesus is spoken of here as the image of God in his
exalted status since his resurrection. So Jesus is only fully this image after his resurrection
and having become immortal. (Heb. 1:3, 1 Cor. 15).
Verse 15b:
... the firstborn (pre-eminent one) of all creation.
firstborn:
that he might be the firstborn among many brothers (Rom. 8:29).
He is the beginning the firstborn from the dead (Col. 1:18).
when He raised him from the dead and seated him at His right hand (rank) in the
heavenly places (Eph. 1:20).
Although firstborn can be used of timing, the usage in Colossians 1:15 is contextually of pre-
eminence. Jesus is elevated to become firstborn because of his personal worthiness which
Adam lost. So Jesus is not firstborn in time but, as the second Adam, is firstborn in terms of
rank and is therefore worthy of a double portion. As Jehovah says of the Messiah:
I myself shall place him as firstborn (Ps. 89:27). So this means that Jesus replaces
the 1st Adam as firstborn.
The Zondervan Encyclopaedia of the Bible p. 540 states:
Christ is the firstborn of the Father having the pre-eminent position over others in
relation to him ... above those related to him in the new creation.
Verse 16:
Because in (KIT) him all things were created, in the heavens and on the earth,
visible and invisible, whether thrones or lordships or governments or
authorities. All things have been created through him and for him.
The creating of an authority is not the physical creating of people.
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Verse 17:
He is (or exists not the past tense was) before (above) all things and in him
(not by or by means of) all things hold together.
before (above) all things (Greek pro panton). Pro has 3 common uses:
1) in the sense of place i.e. in front of.
2) in the sense of time i.e. prior to.
and 3) in the sense of pre-eminence i.e. above in importance.
Karl-Josef Kuschel notes concerning pro panton:
However this before is not a speculative temporal category, but a confessional
category, indicating the status of the one who is the first born of all creation.
In 1 Peter 4:8 and James 5:12 pro panton is translated as Above all things. In Colossians
1:17 neither place nor timing are involved contextually. Therefore pro has the sense of above
e.g.:
far above every government and authority and power and lordship...and subjected all
things under his feet, and made him head over all things to the congregation
(Eph. 1:21, 22).
hold together:
the fullness of him who fills up all things in all (Eph. 1:23).
This is a similar activity that the Christ performs toward the Congregation. This does not refer
to any holding together of the Genesis creation.
..............
Verse 18:
he is the head of the body, the congregation. He is the beginning,
the first-born from the dead, that he might become
the one who is first in all things [pre-eminent].
James Dunn notes that: Christ only gained the status as pre-eminent in all things as a
consequence of his resurrection.
The conclusion is that Colossians 1:15, 16 speaks of Gods New Creation made through
Christ in providing the ransom by his shed blood to reconcile those who become Gods holy
ones and are transferred into the kingdom. No Genesis creation is mentioned; not the creation
of the earth or the heavens but things upon earth and things in heaven: thrones, lordships etc.
This may mean that Jesus has now been given authority to restructure the arrangements of
angels as well as being the agent for the creation of the congregation on earth.
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AGENT OF NEW CREATION
vs 12: I will make him a pillar in the temple of my God...and I will write on him the
name of my God, and...the new Jerusalem...and my new name.
Also, note that the context is in the present tense showing that the rulership is not a
reference to the time of the Genesis creation. It refers to the creation which came into
existence at the time of writing for:
...us to be a certain first fruits of his creatures or first fruits of his creation REB
(James 1:18).
This is just as firstborn of creation refers to the new creation rather than meaning that
Christians were the first ever of creation.
HEBREWS 1:10-12
You (Jesus), at the beginning O Lord, laid the foundation of the earth itself, and the
heavens are the works of your hands. They themselves will perish, but you yourself are to
remain continually; and just like an outer garment they all will grow old, and you will wrap
them up just as a cloak, as an outer garment; and they will be changed, but you are the
same, and Your years will never run out.
Some 50 texts, including Isaiah 44:24 and Hebrews 4:4 show that only Jehovah
produced the Genesis creation. So this text is speaking of a different and future laying
of the foundation of the earth.
THE CONTEXT of the future earth in the Kingdom is found in the following statements in
Hebrews:
God is your throne forever and ever and the sceptre of your kingdom (Heb. 1:8).
...the inhabited earth to come, about which we are speaking (Heb. 2:5).
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The Oxford Bible Commentary notes that up to Hebrews 2:5 the subject is the inhabited
earth to come and Hebrews 1:10 is included in that main theme:
The text at the center of Heb. 2:5ff. is Ps. 8:4-6 and it exhibits thematic connections to
the scriptural catena of the first chapter Heb. 2:5 is an introductory comment
continuing the contrast between the Son and angels. Its reference to the world to
come reinforces the notions of imminent judgment and cosmic transformation
intimated by Ps. 102, cited at 1:10-12.
In the New International Commentary F.F. Bruce explains the situation in this Psalm:
In the Septuagint text the person to whom these words [of old you laid the foundation
of the earth] are spoken is addressed explicitly as Lord; and it is God who
addresses him thus. Whereas in the Hebrew text the suppliant is the speaker from the
beginning to the end of the psalm, in the Greek text his prayer comes to an end with v.
22, and the next words read as follows:
He [God] answered him [the suppliant] in the way of his strength: Declare to
Me the shortness of My days: Bring Me not up in the midst of My days. Thy [the
suppliants] years are throughout all generations. Thou, lord [the suppliant,
understood here as the Messiah in Hebrews], in the beginning didst lay the
foundation of the earth.
This is Gods answer to the suppliant; He bids him acknowledge the shortness of
Gods set time (for the restoration of Jerusalem, as in v. 13) and not summon Him
[God] to act when that set time has only half expired, while He [God] assures him [the
suppliant, called lord by God] that he and his servants children will be preserved
forever But to whom (a Christian reader of the Septuagint might well ask) could God
speak in words like these? And whom would God himself address as Lord, as the
maker [or founder] of earth and heaven?
Footnote:
Bacon suggested that the Hebrew, as well as the Greek, text of this psalm formed a
basis for messianic eschatology, especially its reference to the shortness of Gods
days, i.e., of the period destined to elapse before the consummation of His purpose
[the arrival of the yet future Messianic Kingdom on earth]; he found here the OT
background of Matt. 24:22, Mark 13:20 and Ep. Barn. 4.3 (as Enoch says, For to this
end the Master [God] has cut short the times and the days, that his Beloved [Jesus]
should make haste and come to his inheritance). The Epistle to the Hebrews p.62-63.
The Septuagint was translated from a different Hebrew manuscript where the vowel
pointing over this phrase was different to that which was over the phrase in the Masoretic
text. The author of Hebrews had before him the Septuagint reading of Psalm 101/102 when he
quoted verses 25-27 in Hebrews 1:10-12. Also in the article Heb. 1:10-12 and the Septuagint
Rendering of Ps. 102:23, B.W. Bacon explained that:
the whole passage down to the end of the psalm becomes the answer of Yahweh to
the suppliant who accordingly appears to be addressed as Kurie and creator of heaven
and earth...Instead of understanding the verse as a complaint of the psalmist at the
shortness of his days which are cut off in the midst, LXX and the Vulgate understand
the utterance to be Yahweh's answer to the psalmists plea that he will intervene to
save Zion, because it is time to have pity on her, yea, the set time is come (v. 13).
He is bidden acknowledge (or prescribe?) the shortness of Yahwehs set time, and
not to summon him when it is but half expired. On the other hand he [ the Messianic
lord] is promised that his own endurance shall be perpetual with the children of his
servants. Zeitschrift fr die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft 3, 1902, p. 280-285.
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For we are the product of His work and were created in Christ Jesus (Eph. 2:10).
when Christ came as high priest of the good things that have come to pass (or the
good things to come), through the greater and more perfect tent not made with hands,
that is not of this creation (Heb. 9:11).
Such things are evidently reflecting the agency of Jesus in the New Creation because of his
sacrifice and High Priesthood. So Psalm 101/102, whether in the Septuagint or the Masoretic
text, is entirely forward looking to the New Creation, as is Isaiah 51:16 and part of the first
chapter of Hebrews.
The Psalm 101/Hebrews 1:10 statement In the beginning refers to the first of Jesus
creative works in laying the foundation for the New Creation by his sacrifice. Furthermore, the
writer of Hebrews chapter 1 is comparing the superiority of Jesus over the angels. So by taking
the Psalm 101 reapplied text in the Septuagint of a future creation, the writer shows that the
Lord Messiah laid the foundation of the New Creation for the Millennium. Jesus is
once again shown to be now superior to angels because he is agent of that New Creation
something that no angel can be.
1 CORINTHIANS 8:6
there is to us one God the Father, from whom are all things and we for Him; there is
one Lord Jesus Christ through whom are all things and we (the New Creation) through
him.
THEME: The One God has made new creatures by reconciling us to himself through the One
exalted Lord who is also over all gods.
CONTEXT verse 4: We know that an idol is nothing, and there is no God but one.
So this is not about past creation but about the present worship of the one God of the Shema.
So Christ is the agent of the new creation. The all things (Gk ta panta) phrase is used in
other contexts with no thought of the universe e.g. 1 Corinthians 11:12b: All things are from
God.
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AGENT OF NEW CREATION
By Raymond C. Faircloth
www.biblicaltruthseekers.co.uk