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What does it mean to truly belong to a team where grace comes before performance? This powerful conclusion to the Colossians series challenges us to see the Christian life not as a solo journey, but as a team game where Christ is the center that holds everything together. Drawing from Colossians 3:12-4:18, we're reminded that our identity in Christ comes before our instructions—we are chosen, holy, and beloved before we're ever asked to do anything. The passage beautifully unpacks what it looks like when a community puts on compassion, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience, not as individual virtues, but as team characteristics that bind us together in love. The imagery of putting on a jersey resonates deeply—we don't become Christians by trying out for the team, but by accepting that grace has already called our name. When Christ's peace rules in our hearts like a referee making the final call, we stop demanding our preferred outcomes and start trusting God's wisdom. The challenge extends into our homes, workplaces, and ordinary relationships, reminding us that the gospel isn't proven in abstract theology but in how we treat each other when we're tired, frustrated, or overlooked. We're called to be salt that makes others thirst for Christ, living in such a way that our ordinary faithfulness makes the extraordinary love of God visible to a watching world.
By Everwell Church5
44 ratings
What does it mean to truly belong to a team where grace comes before performance? This powerful conclusion to the Colossians series challenges us to see the Christian life not as a solo journey, but as a team game where Christ is the center that holds everything together. Drawing from Colossians 3:12-4:18, we're reminded that our identity in Christ comes before our instructions—we are chosen, holy, and beloved before we're ever asked to do anything. The passage beautifully unpacks what it looks like when a community puts on compassion, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience, not as individual virtues, but as team characteristics that bind us together in love. The imagery of putting on a jersey resonates deeply—we don't become Christians by trying out for the team, but by accepting that grace has already called our name. When Christ's peace rules in our hearts like a referee making the final call, we stop demanding our preferred outcomes and start trusting God's wisdom. The challenge extends into our homes, workplaces, and ordinary relationships, reminding us that the gospel isn't proven in abstract theology but in how we treat each other when we're tired, frustrated, or overlooked. We're called to be salt that makes others thirst for Christ, living in such a way that our ordinary faithfulness makes the extraordinary love of God visible to a watching world.