Day 2

The Centrality of Christ

from the Colossians and Philemon reading plan


Colossians 1:15-23, Genesis 1:1, Genesis 1:26-27, 1 Corinthians 8:5-6, Jude 1:24-25

BY Patti Sauls

I guess it was inevitable. All my life, I had 20/20 vision. Distant street signs? No problem. Small print on a menu? I’ve got this. But then I turned forty. As eyestrain and blurriness became my new normal, I realized how much I had taken the gift of clear vision for granted. Now I have eyeglasses scattered throughout my home and car as I squint to see things up close and far away. Good times.

Today’s passages remind us that, without Jesus, our spiritual vision is impaired too. On our own, we strain as we consider who God is and how we can be close to Him. Can I know God? Does God really love and accept me? Can I trust Him? The answers to such honest, human questions shape our faith and lives, yet they often seem blurry.

Paul wanted the church in Colossae to see truth clearly. They had started with gospel clarity, seeing Jesus as the only one able to reconcile sinful people to a holy God, “by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross” (Colossians 1:20). But false teachers were misleading the church. They were instructing the Colossians to rely on their own efforts and enlightenment for right standing with God, instead of relying on the finished work of Jesus’s life, death, and resurrection. The issue was a Christ-centered worldview versus their self-centered worldview, which is a futile, tiring way to live.

Truth was being twisted and blurred, so Paul urged the Colossians to look to Christ. Relying on Christ alone was the only way to see and experience God with clarity and certainty. “[Jesus] is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation” (v.15). Jesus is the very image of God because He is God. When we look to Jesus—how He lived, how He loved, how He forgave, how He sacrificed to restore broken, lost people—we see how God relates to us.

Looking to Christ is like putting on eyeglasses so we can see God and ourselves more clearly. Looking to Christ means seeing and embracing the truth that He is Creator and King of every single thing in all creation—including our salvation, the daily ups and downs of our lives, and the state of the entire world.

To be sure, our vision is impaired and life can be a blur: morning-rush meltdowns, job hassles, relationship tensions, deep disappointments, fear of the future. We strain for clarity and control. But let us “not [shift] away from the hope of the gospel” (v.23). Is blurriness about God’s power and love becoming your new normal? Are you feeling the strain of relying more and more on yourself to push through each day? Put on your eyeglasses! Look to Christ and rely on Him. Rest in Him.

Jesus, you see, rule, and restore all of your creation. Help us rely on You, to trust You to restore our sight too. Restore our vision of Your power and love. Amen.

Post Comments (79)

79 thoughts on "The Centrality of Christ"

  1. Charity Drury says:

    I pray that I can be more like Jesus in my thoughts words and actions!!!

  2. Delaney Jackson says:

    My heart needed this.

  3. Abbie Merhoff says:

    i need to wake up every morning putting on my glasses of HIS VISION!!!!

  4. Addie AbuSaada says:

    I’m in some really rocky, and honestly, scary, teenage years right now with my kids. I need to cling to verse 17 “And he is before all things, and in him all things hold together.”

    1. Heather Minnoch says:

      Prayed for you this morning!

  5. Hannah Johns says:

    He is in all things —> this is why we can trust Him.

    1. Shay Griffin says:

      This is good!

  6. Melinda Taylor says:

    I’m embarrassed to admit that I find it challenging to rely on Jesus- like- what does that mean? I’ve always been so self-reliant. It’s like I need to relearn everything.

    1. Kathryn Roberts says:

      I understand because I struggle with this too. We as Americans think of self reliance as a good thing, but what it (can) really mean is that we have set ourselves up as the king of our heart/boss of our life and if we put ourselves in that position then we have taken God out of that spot. Something I have to remind myself of daily!

  7. Susan Cope says:

    Great devotion with practical understanding and application. I “see” it!

  8. Ayo falegan says:

    ❤️

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