18. beguile--Translate, "Defraud you of your prize," literally, "to
adjudge a prize out of hostility away from him who deserves it"
[TRENCH]. "To be umpire in a contest to the detriment of one." This
defrauding of their prize the Colossians would suffer, by letting
any self-constituted arbitrator or judge (that is, false
teacher) draw them away from Christ," the righteous Judge" and Awarder
of the prize
(2Ti 4:8;
Jas 1:12;
1Pe 5:4),
to angel-worship.
in a voluntary humility--So "will-worship"
(Col 2:23).
Literally, "Delighting ([WAHL]) in humility";
loving (so the Greek is translated,
Mr 12:38,
"love to go in long clothing") to indulge himself in a
humility of his own imposing: a volunteer in humility
[DALLÆUS]. Not as ALFORD, "Let no one of purpose defraud you," &c.
Not as GROTIUS, "If he ever so much wish" (to
defraud you). For the participle "wishing" or "delighting," is one of
the series, and stands in the same category as "intruding," "puffed
up," "not holding"; and the self-pleasing implied in it stands
in happy contrast to the (mock) humility with which it seems to
me, therefore, to be connected. His "humility," so called, is a
pleasing of self: thus it stands in parallelism to "his fleshly
mind" (its real name, though he styles it "humility"), as
"wishing" or "delighting" does to "puffed up." The Greek for
"humility" is literally, "lowliness of mind," which forms a
clearer parallel to "puffed up by his fleshly mind." Under
pretext of humility, as if they durst not come directly to God and
Christ (like the modern Church of Rome), they invoked angels: as
Judaizers, they justified this on the ground that the law was given by
angels. This error continued long in Phrygia (where Colosse and
Laodicea were), so that the Council of Laodicea (A.D. 360) expressly framed its thirty-fifth canon
against the "Angelici" (as AUGUSTINE
[Heresies, 39], calls them) or "invokers of angels." Even as
late as THEODORET'S time, there were oratories to
Michael the archangel. The modern Greeks have a legend that Michael
opened a chasm to draw off an inundation threatening the Colossian
Christians. Once men admit the inferior powers to share invocation with
the Supreme, the former gradually engrosses all our serious worship,
almost to the exclusion of the latter; thus the heathen, beginning with
adding the worship of other deities to that of the Supreme, ended with
ceasing to worship Him at all. Nor does it signify much, whether we
regard such as directly controlling us (the pagan view), or as only
influencing the Supreme in our behalf (the Church of Rome's
view); because he from whom I expect happiness or misery, becomes the
uppermost object in my mind, whether he give, or only
procure it [Cautions for Times]. Scripture opposes the
idea of "patrons" or "intercessors"
(1Ti 2:5, 6).
True Christian humility joins consciousness of utter personal demerit,
with a sense of participation in the divine life through Christ, and in
the dignity of our adoption by God. Without the latter being realized,
a false self-humiliation results, which displays itself in ceremonies
and ascetic self-abasement
(Col 2:23),
which after all is but spiritual pride under the mock guise of
humility. Contrast "glorying in the Lord"
(1Co 1:31).
intruding into . . . things which he hath not seen--So very old
manuscripts and Vulgate and
ORIGEN read. But the oldest manuscripts
and LUCIFER omit "not"; then translate, "haughtily treading on
('Standing on'
[ALFORD]) the things which he hath seen."
TREGELLES
refers this to fancied visions of angels. But if Paul had meant a
fancied seeing, he would have used some qualifying word, as, "which
he seemed to see," not "which he hath seen." Plainly the things
were actually seen by him, whether of demoniacal origination
(1Sa 28:11-20),
or phenomena resulting from natural causation, mistaken by him as if
supernatural. Paul, not stopping to discuss the nature of the things so
seen, fixes on the radical error, the tendency of such a one in all
this to walk by SENSE (namely, what he
haughtily prides himself on having SEEN),
rather than by FAITH in the UNSEEN "Head"
(Col 2:19;
compare
Joh 20:29;
2Co 5:7;
Heb 11:1).
Thus is the parallelism, "vainly puffed up" answers to "haughtily
treading on," or "setting his foot on"; "his fleshly mind" answers to
the things which he hath seen," since his fleshliness betrays itself in
priding himself on what he hath seen, rather than on the
unseen objects of faith. That the things seen may have
been of demoniacal origination, appears from
1Ti 4:1,
"Some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing
spirits and doctrines of devils" (Greek, "demons"). A warning to
modern spiritualists.
puffed up--implying that the previous so called "humility" (Greek, "lowliness of mind") was really a "puffing up."
fleshly mind--Greek, "By the mind of his own flesh." The flesh,
or sensuous principle, is the fountain head whence his mind draws its
craving after religious objects of sight, instead of, in true
humility as a member, "holding fast the (unseen) Head."
JFB.
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