Resting Where the Son Has Always Been
Colossians 3:3
"If then you have been raised with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God."
Children always have access to the Father. No intermediaries are necessary. In the same way that Jesus has direct access to our Father, so too do we have direct access to Him. There is absolutely no need for a filtering of our spiritual experiences through the dead in Christ. In fact, in the surrounding verses we learn that our old life is "hidden with Christ in God", and because we’ve been raised with Him, we’re called to seek and set our minds on His heavenly realities. Keeping our minds on where Christ sits exalted at the Father’s right hand, rather than being consumed by earthly things.
Have you ever wondered why God has such a visceral hatred for idols?
I find that it's one of the most striking threads running through out all of Scripture. God’s response to idols isn’t just some mild disapproval; it’s repeatedly described with intense language.
Jealousy.
Anger.
Wrath.
Even a "devouring fire."
From the thunder of Mt. Sinai all the way to the warnings in the New Testament, it is unequivocal that Jesus does not respect any of our attempts to make our affection known through religious practices.
Yet time after time we find His people chasing after one or another idols in their vain attempts at reaching out to Him. They weren’t usually denying God’s existence outright; they were trying to supplement Him, hedge their bets, or make Him more "accessible" through something tangible. But in reality they were only satisfying the flesh and they give no glory to God. These things give no honor to God. It always looks like a sincere spiritual pursuit on the surface, but it is actually spiritual adultery. Breaking the exclusive covenant bond, like a wife running to other lovers while still claiming loyalty to her husband (see Hosea).
God takes it very personal because the relationship we have with Him is very personal.
Oh sure, Christian people are a congregation of believers, people who fellowship in Christ (Koinonia). And our worship and prayer life can be and probably should be communal. Gathering to sing, to break bread, to encourage one another, to bear burdens together. That horizontal fellowship is a gift and a command. But notice the crucial distinction that Colossians 3 (and the whole New Testament) guards so carefully:
Our vertical access to the Father remains direct and unmediated through Jesus alone. We aren't taking a bus load into the heavenly places. Our vertical access is not a group tour, not a convoy, not a mediated chain of command. It is direct, personal, and immediate through Jesus Christ alone.
Our life is hidden with Christ in God (Colossians 3:3).
Say it again, slowly, and let it land:
Our life is hidden with Christ in God.
That short phrase is one of the most breathtaking statements in all of Scripture. It means the real you, the deepest, truest part of your broken existence, is no longer dangling out in the open where sin, death, the broken world, or any created thing can ultimately touch it. It has been tucked away, safely concealed, inside the unbreakable union between the risen Christ and the Father Himself. And there you are, resting in His lap, like a child in his Papa's lap. Your life is hidden with Christ in God. Not hidden in some cold, distant vault, but tucked safely inside the eternal, joyful embrace between the Father and the child.
The same place where the beloved Son has always rested, now holds you. The real you (even the broken, messy, still-being-sanctified parts) is not exposed and vulnerable to every accusation, every failure, every storm. It is concealed in the safest place in the universe. This is why your access can be so direct and childlike. You don’t have to climb a ladder of mediators or earn a seat at the table. You’re already there; hidden, held, and welcomed, because Jesus has carried you into that intimate place.
You're already there.
Say it again, slowly, and let it land:
You're already there.
When you pray, you’re not shouting across a great divide; you’re speaking from the lap of The Father, with the Son right beside you, interceding with perfect understanding. You’re not sneaking into some outer court; you’re resting in the bosom of the Father through the Son who has always been there (John 1:18). They are One, and "Us" at the same time. The same divine essence, the same glory, the same eternal love; and yet "Us" at the same time. Three distinct Persons, perfectly united, delighting in one another from before the foundation of the world.
That is the sacred place where your life is hidden. That is the fellowship you have been bought and brought into. That is why your access can be so immediate, so childlike, and so confident. When you pray, you are not an outsider begging to be noticed. After all, He came looking and found you. It's not the other way around.
The Father didn’t sit distant on His throne waiting for you to muster up enough courage or holiness to approach. The Son didn’t remain safely in the bosom of the Father and send instructions from afar. He set His affection on you and came after you. So when you pray, you are not crashing an exclusive party. You are a rescued child already home, already held, already welcomed into the embrace that never began and will never end.
Rest in that today. Pray from that place. Let every anxious thought, every sense of distance, every lingering feeling of "I have to get it right first" be answered by the simple, staggering truth, He came looking…
And He found you.
Amen?