Colossians 1:15-20
As we have journeyed through our series on belonging, we have focussed each week on readings from Paul’s letter to the early Christian community in Colossae.
We have thought about what it means to belong in Christ as we follow Christ and as we thrive in Christ’s life.
We have thought about what it means to belong in the community of the church as people whose lives are hidden in Christ’s life.
And this week we will explore what it means to belong in the world and our relationship with other peoples and the creation who are also in Christ. Listen again to Paul’s claim about Jesus.
“He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation, for in him all things in heaven and on earth were created, things visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or powers—all things have been created through him and for him. He himself is before all things, and in him all things hold together.”
There is a universal or cosmic scope to Jesus’s relationship with the world in which we find ourselves. In last week’s reading from Colossians 3 we heard this cosmic claim echoes when Paul wrote, “Christ is all, and Christ is in all.” As followers of Jesus, and as the church, we are sent out from church each week to meet Jesus where he is already present and at work among all peoples and in the whole creation. As Christian people our thriving involves ensuring the thriving of others and the flourishing of the world.
During the week I was reading about St Francis, whom I will be referring to later in the sermon, and given the breadth of this morning’s topic I am acutely aware of one of the rules of St Francis “I admonish and exhort the brothers that in their preaching... they ought to be brief, because the Lord kept his words brief when he was on earth.” I am not sure I will be brief enough for St Francis but let’s see how we go.
There are two essential parts to this message belonging to the human family and belonging to the creation. The first is our connection with other people and belonging to the common human family. As Christians the common ground of our faith is that “in Christ all things hold together”. In meeting and getting to know another person we are invited to curiously seek Christ’s presence in them as we listen to their story.
It can be so tempting as Christians that as we engage with another person to seek to colonise their thoughts and their lives with how we live and what we believe. However, the challenge for us people of faith is to seek to meet the presence of Christ which is already within them.
When we mainly hang around people who look like us and share our beliefs, gaining a concept of how challenging this might be this involves lifting our eyes to see the people of the world. It means being curious about who they are and what their experience of life is like.
One of the better documentaries about humanity was made by Yann Arthus-Betrand. It is simply called “Human” and is freely available on YouTube. For those of us who may be not have the opportunity to travel it is a way to meet people from across the globe. I would love to share some of the stories, but I am keeping to my commitment of brevity so I will just share the trailer and encourage you to find it for yourselves on YouTube.
The goal in listening to the stories of others is to be curious about how their stories might change who you are as you listen for Christ speaking through their lives into yours. In hearing these stories there is also the challenge for us to be changed by the stories of people from across the globe and act with the love of God and compassion of Christ. As people of the Uniting Church this was part of our vision in 1977 in our statement to the nation when we declared:
“We affirm our eagerness to uphold basic Christian values and principles, such as the importance of every human being, the need for integrity in public life, the proclamation of truth and justice, the rights for each citizen to participate in decision-making in the community, religious liberty and personal dignity, and a concern for the welfare of the whole human race.” UCA 1977 Statement to the Nation
As I contemplated the challenge of how we connect to people across the world sometimes it can feel a bit daunting but beginning where we are can always be a starting point. Some of you may remember the movie “Pay it Forward” when a young boy started a school project inviting people in response to an act of kindness to pay it forward by doing good deeds for three other people.
Another way of thinking about the simplicity of helping others is found is the great little video from Soul Pancake by Kid President.
I said earlier that I was reading the rule of St Francis in preparation for today and I believe that we could all benefit from this simple but challenging rule in our interactions with all others that we meet. “I counsel, admonish and beg my brothers that, when they travel about the world, they should not be quarrelsome, dispute with words, or criticise others, but rather should be gentle, peaceful and unassuming, courteous and humble, speaking respectfully to all as is fitting.” St Francis
As we begin to engage with others the simple values of respect, curiosity, and kindness may help us in our contribution to sharing God’s love in the world.
This brings me to make a few comments on the second aspect of the cosmic Christ and our responsibility for the creation.
In Genesis 1, human beings are given responsibility over the earth, and most Christians understand that the concept of dominion is not one of domination but one of stewardship. We are called to care for the creation in which we live as we put on the new self and look towards the coming renewal of all things in Christ.
I have always thought that the Uniting Church Statement to the Nation was ahead of its time when it said, “We are concerned with the basic human rights of future generations and will urge the wise use of energy, the protection of the environment and the replenishment of the earth's resources for their use and enjoyment.” (1977 Statement to the Nation)
The world is God’s good creation, and its value is found not simply in its benefits for humanity but in the fact that it has all been renewed in and through Christ. As a person who lives in a developed nation, I find the care for creation particularly challenging.
During my time as a Chaplain each year we did a Unit on Creation and our responsibility for the environment with the Year 12 students. In this Unit we reflected on issues like pollution, consumerism, and climate change. One of the activities was to measure our ecological footprint and consider the concept of Overshoot Days.
The footprint calculator provided feedback on how many planet earths are needed to resource your personal lifestyle if everyone on the planet lived the way that you do. In the 7 years that I taught this only once did I have a student who had less than 2 planet earths. She was a vegan and being vegetarian or vegan has a big impact on your score!
Each year that I completed it my own result hovered around 4-5 planet earths. That means if everyone lived like I do we need 4-5 planet earths for that to occur sustainably. Regularly we had students who scored 10 or more and one made it to 17 and a half. The underlying message for us is our consumerist lifestyle is not sustainable for everyone on the planet. It raises questions for us as individuals of what it means for us to care for God’s good creation.
Alongside the ecological footprint the concept of earth overshoot days measures when a country has utilised the sustainable resources available to that country for that year. In 2025 Australia’s overshoot day was on March 19. The implication of this is that we are now using resources beyond what is sustainably available to us.
As we contemplate our lifestyles my intention is not to create a sense of guilt but to challenge us to think spiritually about how we live in response to what Paul wrote to the Colossians. “For in him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, and through him God was pleased to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, by making peace through the blood of his cross.”
To return to St Francis rules there is something to be said about the commitment to poverty and living simply. He said, “The brothers should appropriate neither house, nor place, nor anything for themselves; and they should go confidently after alms, serving God in poverty and humility, as pilgrims and strangers in this world.”
Jesus words to the rich young ruler to sell everything that you have a give it the poor were taken literally by St Francis. This idea may feel a bridge too far for you and me, but as you think about the aspects of the message today, I remind you that our response is about our participation in what God has already done for us in Christ.
In Christ we are invited to live in love for other people and the whole creation. To conclude as you think about what you are feeling called to in your connection with other people and the creation, I am going to share a prayer written by Pope Francis for “Laudato Si” which was an encyclical written about our common home and environment. The phrase “Laudato Si” is a central phrase in St Francis’s Canticle of the Sun by St Francis and means “Praise be to you, my Lord”.