Law of Clean and Unclean Meats
Colossians 2:16-17: Does It Abolish the Law
of Clean and Unclean Meats?
.
Colossians 2:16 and 17 don’t use the Greek word for meat or flesh, kreas. Rather the word is brosis, a more general word for eating of food, coupled with posis, the general word for imbibing of any beverage. There is no explicit mention of animal flesh here at all. Apparently, these ascetics thought some in the congregation at Colossae were enjoying their food and drink too much! Paul told the members in Colossae not to be concerned about what these ascetics were saying about their eating and drinking (of things that were biblically lawful) or to worry about any other ascetic practices related to a new moon, festival or Sabbaths that these people might try to force upon the members. These two verses don’t change God’s laws about eating and drinking and they don’t abolish festive occasions.
by
Ralph Levy
Does Colossians 2 refer to God’s laws about
clean and unclean animals in a negative way?
Or does the context provide a different
explanation?
“So let no one judge
you in food or in drink, or regarding a festival or a new moon or sabbaths,
which are a shadow of things to come, but the substance [body, King James
Version] is of Christ” -
(Colossians 2:16-17).
Some claim that these verses abolish the law
about clean and unclean animals, and that Christians may now eat pork,
shellfish and the other meats designated as “unclean” in Leviticus
11:1-23 and Deuteronomy 14:3-20.
Is this true?
Understanding the context: the influence of
pagan philosophies
As in all matters of biblical interpretation,
context is important.
The Colossian church was being troubled by
various strange ideas, such as worship of angels.
Some of the philosophies mentioned in
Colossians bear resemblance to the teachings of the later Gnostics, who
believed that spirit and matter were in essential conflict.
They considered the spirit good and the body
to be evil.
Some Gnostics tended toward libertinism
(indulgence of the physical), while others were ascetic, believing all
pleasurable activity was sinful.
These elements of gnostic doctrine are
reflected in the book of Colossians.
Note the mentions of
false humility and worship of angels in Colossians 2:18: “Let no one cheat
you of your reward [eternal life in God’s Kingdom], taking delight in false
humility and worship of angels.”
Note also the
reference to asceticism in verses 20-21: “Therefore, if you died with Christ
from the basic principles of the world, why, as though living in the world, do
you subject yourselves to regulations — ‘Do not touch, do not taste, do not
handle’…?”
Verse 23 also talks
about “neglect of the body.”
Eating and drinking
When placed in this context, Colossians 2:16
and 17 make good sense.
These verses don’t use the Greek word for
meat or flesh, kreas, which is used in Romans 14:21 and 1
Corinthians 8:13.
Rather the word is brosis, a
more general word for eating of food, coupled with posis, the
general word for imbibing of any beverage.
There is no explicit mention of animal flesh
here at all.
It seems the ascetic heretics wished to
deprive the Christians of lawful enjoyment of the normal activities of eating
and drinking, such as in celebrating a festival.
Apparently, these ascetics thought some in the congregation at Colosse were enjoying their food and drink too much!Paul told the members in Colosse not to be concerned about what these ascetics were saying about their eating and drinking (of things that were biblically lawful) or to worry about any other ascetic practices related to a new moon, festival or Sabbaths that these people might try to force upon the members.
These two verses don’t change God’s laws
about eating and drinking and they don’t abolish festive occasions.
Ralph
Levy is a native of London, England, and now a naturalized citizen of the
United States. He works primarily as a professor of theology at Foundation
Institute, Center for Biblical Education, in Texas. Foundation Institute is the
educational institution of the Church of God, a Worldwide Association.
https://lifehopeandtruth.com/bible/biblical-laws/clean-and-unclean-animals/colossians-2/
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