"Him we proclaim...." Colossians 1:28
Christ was the continually spotlighted element in Paul's ministry. Even if we did not have an explicit statement telling us this, as we do here in Colossians (see also 1 Corinthians 2:2; 2 Corinthians 4:5), we would still know it to be true from what is the general tone and content of his many sermons and epistles: Christ is simply everywhere.
But why is this so for him? The Bible is a very large book, much of it not explicitly mentioning our Lord. So why was Paul's life and ministry so explicitly "Christ-focused"?
The answer is this: because the Bible itself is "Christ-focused."
Christ is the centerpiece of all God's revelation. All of salvation history moves toward Christ, and all the parts find themselves tied together in him. The whole of the biblical plot-line (if we understand the big picture), features Jesus of Nazareth as its main character. Whether explicitly (as in the Gospels for example), or implicitly (as in the Prophets for instance), in God's divine redemptive drama, Christ has the lead role.
Tim Keller expresses this truth concisely and draws out the implications of it in such a way that I think Paul would heartily agree with:
"There are two ways to read the Bible. The one way to read the Bible
is that it’s basically about you: what you have to do in order to be
right with God, in which case you’ll never have a sure and certain hope,
because you’ll always know you’re not quite living up. You’ll never be
sure about that future. Or you can read it as all about Jesus. Every
single thing is not about what you must do in order to make yourself
right with God, but what he has done to make you absolutely right with
God. And Jesus Christ is saying, “Unless you can read the Bible right,
unless you can understand salvation by grace, you’ll never have a sure
and certain hope. But once you understand it’s all about me, Jesus
Christ, then you can know that you have peace. You can know that you
have this future guaranteed, and you can face anything."
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