9 min 5 mths

βœ‰οΈ CHRIST IN PHILIPPIANS AND COLOSSIANS

β›ͺ Lesson 1: Persecuted but Not Forsaken


πŸ“˜ 1.6 Summary

✨ Christ Above All: Faithful in the Trial


🟦 Introduction

How do you live faithfully when you are persecuted?
How do you build a church while in chains?
How does the gospel grow when the apostle is absent?

These questions are at the heart of the letters to the Philippians and Colossians. Paul, himself a prisoner, writes to churches under pressureβ€”both from outside and within. And yet every line shines with this truth: God continues to workβ€”through devotion, order, and spiritual perseverance.

This week’s lesson teaches us that God’s church is not sustained by circumstances, but by Christ. Persecution may be real, but abandonment is impossible when Christ stands at the center.

………………..βœ‰οΈ………………..

πŸ“– Bible Study

πŸ”Ή 1. Paul – a prisoner, but not imprisoned

Philippians 1:13:
β€œβ€¦so that it has become known throughout the whole praetorian guard and to everyone else that my imprisonment is for Christ.”

Paul does not describe his imprisonment as defeat, but as a platform for the gospel. His β€œchains in Christ” became a testimonyβ€”even in β€œCaesar’s household” (Phil 4:22). Circumstances did not define his calling; they served it.

────────────────────────

πŸ”Ή 2. Suffering as a callingβ€”not as punishment

Acts 9:16:
β€œFor I will show him how much he must suffer for my name.”

Paul knew that suffering was not an accident, but part of his mission. This helped him not only endure trials, but interpret them spiritually. His prison lettersβ€”including Philippians, Colossians, Ephesians, and Philemonβ€”are today foundational texts of our faith.

────────────────────────

πŸ”Ή 3. Spiritual steadfastnessβ€”in chains, but not broken

2 Corinthians 4:7–12:
β€œβ€¦hard pressed on every side, but not crushed; perplexed, but not in despair…”

Paul encourages us: Christ lives in fragile vessels. His power is revealed precisely when human resources fail. Paul trusts spiritual resourcesβ€”truth, holiness, graceβ€”rather than outward strength.

────────────────────────

πŸ”Ή 4. Church planting without personal presence

Colossians 1:7:
β€œβ€¦as you learned it from Epaphras, our beloved fellow servant…”

Paul had never visited Colossae. Yet through faithful coworkers like Epaphras, a vibrant church grew there. This shows that the mission did not depend on Paulβ€”but on reproduction and discipleship.

────────────────────────

πŸ”Ή 5. Order in the churchβ€”not control, but a structure of service

Philippians 1:1: β€œβ€¦with the overseers and deacons”
Colossians 1:2: β€œβ€¦to the holy and faithful brothers…”

From early on, the church had responsible, spiritually guided structures. Paul knew: without leadership, the body of Christ scatters. With leadership, it grows.

………………..βœ‰οΈ………………..

πŸ’Ž Spiritual Principles

  1. God is not dependent on circumstancesβ€”only on faithful hearts.

  2. Suffering is often part of the missionβ€”not its failure.

  3. The church thrives through spiritual order, not chaos.

  4. The gospel grows through multiplication, not centralization.

  5. The true power of the gospel is revealed in weakness.

………………..βœ‰οΈ………………..

πŸ› οΈ Everyday Application

β€’ Do you feel trapped by illness, pressure, or fear? β†’ Remember: Paul wrote world-changing letters in chains.
β€’ Do you see no progress? β†’ Paul worked through others, not only through himself.
β€’ Do you doubt your church? β†’ Order is not the enemy of the Spiritβ€”it is its foundation.
β€’ Do you feel β€œsmall”? β†’ Colossae was smallβ€”but God did great things through faithful believers.

………………..βœ‰οΈ………………..

βœ… Conclusion

God uses our weakness, our woundsβ€”even our chainsβ€”when we place them in His hands. Paul shows us:
The prisoner of Christ is the freest person in the world.
And churches built on spiritual identity and healthy structure bear fruitβ€”for generations.

………………..βœ‰οΈ………………..

πŸ’­ Thought of the Day

β€œA person in chains can accomplish more than a hundred people in freedomβ€”if Christ lives in him.”

………………..βœ‰οΈ………………..

✍️ Illustration

β€œLetters from the Quarantine Zone”
A story of church, calling, and faithfulness in the 21st century


Part I – The City Behind the Fence

The city was called San MartΓ­n del Sur.
A mid-sized metropolis somewhere between sea and mountains in South America. Once known for trade, music, and open squares. Now it was known for checkpoints, drones, and digital surveillance.

Religion was not forbiddenβ€”but strictly regulated. Public proclamation was considered β€œsocially destabilizing.” Churches were allowed to exist as long as they remained invisible.

AndrΓ©s Ferreira, 47 years old, was a church leader in San MartΓ­n. Not a salaried pastor, but a history teacher. Father of three. Quiet, analytical, faithful to Scripture.

One morning, after a house service with twelve people, there was a knock at the door.

β€œMr. Ferreira, you are temporarily detained.
Suspicion: unauthorized religious gathering.”

No shouting. No violence. Just handcuffs.


Part II – The Windowless Room

The room was small. Concrete. No window. A camera in the corner.
AndrΓ©s sat on a metal chair. He was given paper. No phone. No internet.

An officer said, β€œYou may write. It calms people.”

AndrΓ©s smiled faintly.
He thought of Paul.

β€œPerhaps this is my pulpit,” he thought.

He began to writeβ€”not accusations, not demands.
He wrote letters to the church.


Part III – The First Letter

β€œTo the saints in Christ in San MartΓ­nβ€”
not to the brave, but to the called.
Not to the strong, but to the faithful.”

He reminded them:
β€’ that the church is not a building,
β€’ that order is not an enemy of the Spirit,
β€’ that Christ reigns even behind walls.

β€œI am not a prisoner of the state.
I am a prisoner of Christ.”

The officer read along. Said nothing.
But he carried the letter out.


Part IV – The Churches Without Names

The church did not fall apart. It multiplied.

As in Colossae, where Paul had never been, new groups emergedβ€”without AndrΓ©s.

β€’ LucΓ­a, a nurse, led a house group.
β€’ Mateo, a student, took over Sabbath School.
β€’ Rosa, a widow, cared for the needy.

They did not call themselves β€œchurch.”
They called themselves β€œthe fellowship.”

They had elders.
They had deacons.
They had clear responsibilities.

Not out of compulsionβ€”but out of love.


Part V – The Second Letter: Order

AndrΓ©s wrote again:

β€œFreedom without order becomes chaos.
Order without love becomes tyranny.
Christ calls us to both.”

He reminded them of Acts 6, Philippians 1, Colossians 1.

β€œAppoint elders.
Care for one another.
Let no one fight alone.”

The letters were copied.
Passed on.
Memorized.

Just like with Paul.


Part VI – The Guard

His name was Javier Molina.
38 years old. Two children. No religion.

He brought AndrΓ©s food every day.
He heard him pray.
Not loudlyβ€”but consistently.

One day he asked, β€œWhy are you so calm?”

AndrΓ©s replied, β€œBecause I am not alone.”

Javier laughed at first.
Later, he asked for a Bible.


Part VII – The Third Letter: Suffering

β€œWhen we suffer, we are not forgotten.
When we are persecuted, we are not abandoned.
Christ was here first.”

β€œAfflicted, but not crushed.
Persecuted, but not abandoned.”

The letter went viralβ€”anonymously.
People shared it in secret.


Part VIII – The Guard’s Decision

One night, Javier stayed longer.

β€œMy wife is sick.
I don’t know what to believe.”

AndrΓ©s said, β€œI only know whom I belong to.”

They prayed.
Silently. Without words.

Javier began to pass on the letters intentionally.


Part IX – The Release

After six months, AndrΓ©s was released.
No apology. No trial.

He came homeβ€”and found not an empty church, but a grown one.

New leaders.
New groups.
New baptisms.

He wept.


Part X – The Final Letter

On Sabbath, AndrΓ©s did not step into the pulpit.
He sat in the last row.

LucΓ­a preached.
Mateo led the singing.
Rosa organized the service.

AndrΓ©s understood:

β€œThe church has learned to live without me.
That is exactly what God wanted.”

He wrote his final letter:

β€œIt is not the apostle who carries the churchβ€”
Christ does.”

………………..βœ‰οΈ………………..

πŸ“Œ Final Reflections on the Story

This story shows, in modern language, what Paul lived:

β€’ The church grows under pressure.
β€’ Order protects spiritual life.
β€’ Persecution can lead to multiplication.
β€’ The prisoner of Christ is never abandoned.

Visited 71 times, 1 visit(s) today