This is who He is. This is enough. This is everything.
Colossians 1:15-20
"He [Jesus] is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. For by [in] him all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities, all things were created through him and for him. And he is before all things, and in him all things hold together. And he is the head of the body, the church. He is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in everything he might be preeminent. For in him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross."
This is the majestic declaration about the supremacy and sufficiency of Jesus Christ. For me this is my creed, and confession. It’s not just beautiful poetry or deep theology, it’s a battle cry of allegiance. In a world, and even in some churches, that constantly tries to add to Christ, dilute Him, or place anything alongside Him, I'm planting my flag of faith here, and saying:
"No. This is who He is. This is more than enough. In fact this is everything."
Whether in prison ministry conversations, online exchanges, or quiet morning devotions like this one; I've made this confession personal. It's not an abstract belief for me. It’s the anchor that holds my faith firm when pressures come alongside to compromise, add intermediaries, or rely on anything else but Him alone.
• Who Jesus is? - He's the visible image of the invisible God, fully divine and fully man.
• What He’s done? - He is the Creator, he who created all things for Himself.
• What that means for us? - He is our peace-maker and reconciler.
Now flip the script...
Who Jesus isn’t:
He isn’t a created being, the first thing God made. If everything created came through Him, He can’t be part of the "all things" that were made. He isn’t an angel, an aeon, a high-ranking creature, or a divine intermediary lower than the Father. He isn’t a partial revelation or a "way-station" to God. He is the exact image of the invisible God (v. 15).
He isn’t improvable, supplementable, or in need of partners/mediators/rituals to make Him effective. No angelic go-betweens, no philosophical upgrades, no ongoing sacrifices or merit systems that "complete" what He finished. He isn’t a co-redeemer or one option among many paths. The cross isn’t a starting point, it’s the once-for-all peace-maker.
What He hasn’t done:
He hasn’t left creation or reconciliation unfinished, partial, or dependent on us to activate/continue. He created all things. No loose ends. No "Jesus plus my effort/performance/ritual/ experience" to seal the deal. The work is complete. He declared "It is finished" (John 19:30). He hasn’t failed to subdue powers, forgive sins fully, or make peace. Nothing remains for human additions to fix or merit to earn. He hasn’t been dethroned or rivaled in preeminence. No rival head, no superior wisdom outside of Him.
What this doesn’t mean for us:
It doesn’t mean we add anything to access God. No extra steps, no elite spiritual experiences, no mediators besides Him, no performance ladder to climb for acceptance. Salvation isn’t synergistic ("Jesus plus me" ). It doesn’t mean we’re left to bootstrap our own righteousness or security. No self-made towers of achievement. No drifting into legalism, ritualism, or additions that subtly say "the cross wasn’t enough." It doesn’t mean fear, striving, or insecurity. His preeminence guarantees our peace, our holding-together in chaos, our hope beyond the grave.
And maybe this is what's most important to note; it doesn’t mean indifference. This creed isn’t a cozy sentiment; it’s a battle line against anything that diminishes Him. It means philosophy, Gnostic-like fullness claims, or modern equivalents like institutional gatekeeping cannot substitute for what Christ has already done.
What should we take away from these things?
Adding to the gospel invites curse (Galatians 1:8-9), and the idolatrous re-forming of the perfect sacrifice insults grace.
May this confession keep ringing out in everyone's ministry today, especially to people who feel like they’ve got to "do more" to be accepted. May it point them to the One who has already done it all. Praying the Spirit uses these truths to set captives free in heart and mind.
Friends, guard the gospel’s purity fiercely. Adding to it, even with "good" things like extra mediators, rituals, merits, or institutional gatekeeping, invites the curse. Test every spirit, every message, even if it comes dressed as light.
Remember, this is who He is. This is enough. This is everything.
Amen.