Bible Commentary

Colossians 3:14

The Pulpit Commentary on Colossians 3:14

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

In . "love" is the substance or substratum of the Christian virtues; in it is their head and beginning; here it is that which embraces and completes them. They imply love, but it is more than them all together.

They lie within its circumference; wanting it, they fall to pieces and are nothing. (For συνδεσμός ("bond" or "band"), comp. .) In we have the "bond of peace" (see next verse).

Love is the bond in the active sense, as that wherewith the constituents of a Christian character or the members of a Church are bound together: peace, in a passive sense, as that wherein the union consists.

"Love" (compare "covetousness," ) is made conspicuous by the Greek definite article—being that eminent, essential grace of Christian love (, ; ; .

; , etc.). "Perfectness" is genitive of object, not of quality: love unifies the elements of Christian goodness and gives them in itself their "perfectness" (). (For "perfectness," see note on "perfect," ; and comp.

.) Against Galatian teachers of circumcision, and Corinthian exalters of knowledge, the apostle had magnified the supremacy of love (; ); and so against the Colossian mysticism and asceticism he sets it forth as the crown of spiritual perfection, the goal of human excellence (comp.

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