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Text -- Colossians 3:9 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
3:9 Do not lie to one another since you have put off the old man with its practices
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
, Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Col 3:9 - -- Lie not to another ( mē pseudesthe eis allēlous ). Lying (pseudos ) could have been included in the preceding list where it belongs in reality. ...

Lie not to another ( mē pseudesthe eis allēlous ).

Lying (pseudos ) could have been included in the preceding list where it belongs in reality. But it is put more pointedly thus in the prohibition (mē and the present middle imperative). It means either "stop lying"or "do not have the habit of lying."

Robertson: Col 3:9 - -- Seeing that ye have put off ( apekdusamenoi ). First aorist middle participle (causal sense of the circumstantial participle) of the double compound ...

Seeing that ye have put off ( apekdusamenoi ).

First aorist middle participle (causal sense of the circumstantial participle) of the double compound verb apekduomai , for which see note on Col 2:15. The apo has the perfective sense (wholly), "having stripped clean off."The same metaphor as apothesthe in Col 3:8.

Robertson: Col 3:9 - -- The old man ( ton palaion anthrōpon ). Here Paul brings in another metaphor (mixes his metaphors as he often does), that of the old life of sin reg...

The old man ( ton palaion anthrōpon ).

Here Paul brings in another metaphor (mixes his metaphors as he often does), that of the old life of sin regarded as "the ancient man"of sin already crucified (Rom 6:6) and dropped now once and for all as a mode of life (aorist tense). See same figure in Eph 4:22. Palaios is ancient in contrast with neos (young, new) as in Mat 9:17 or kainos (fresh, unused) as in Mat 13:52.

Robertson: Col 3:9 - -- With his doings ( sun tais praxesin autou ). Practice must square with profession.

With his doings ( sun tais praxesin autou ).

Practice must square with profession.

Vincent: Col 3:9 - -- Seeing that ye have put off ( ἀπεκδυσάμενοι ) See on Col 2:15.

Seeing that ye have put off ( ἀπεκδυσάμενοι )

See on Col 2:15.

Vincent: Col 3:9 - -- The old man See on Rom 6:6.

The old man

See on Rom 6:6.

JFB: Col 3:9 - -- (Eph 4:25.)

JFB: Col 3:9 - -- Greek, "wholly put off"; utterly renounced [TITTMANN]. (Eph 4:22).

Greek, "wholly put off"; utterly renounced [TITTMANN]. (Eph 4:22).

JFB: Col 3:9 - -- The unregenerate nature which ye had before conversion.

The unregenerate nature which ye had before conversion.

JFB: Col 3:9 - -- Habits of acting.

Habits of acting.

Clarke: Col 3:9 - -- Lie not one to another - Do not deceive each other; speak the truth in all your dealings; do not say, "My goods are so and so,"when you know them to...

Lie not one to another - Do not deceive each other; speak the truth in all your dealings; do not say, "My goods are so and so,"when you know them to be otherwise; do not undervalue the goods of your neighbor, when your conscience tells you that you are not speaking the truth. It is naught, it is naught, saith the buyer; but afterwards he boasteth; i.e. he underrates his neighbour’ s property till he gets him persuaded to part with it for less than its worth; and when he has thus got it, he boasts what a good bargain he has made. Such a knave speaks not truth with his neighbor

Clarke: Col 3:9 - -- Ye have put off the old man - See the notes on Rom 6:6; and particularly on Rom 13:11-14 (note). Ye have received a religion widely different from t...

Ye have put off the old man - See the notes on Rom 6:6; and particularly on Rom 13:11-14 (note). Ye have received a religion widely different from that ye had before; act according to its principles.

Calvin: Col 3:9 - -- 9.Lie not. When he forbids lying, he condemns every sort of cunning, and all base artifices of deception. For I do not understand the term as referr...

9.Lie not. When he forbids lying, he condemns every sort of cunning, and all base artifices of deception. For I do not understand the term as referring merely to calumnies, but I view it as contrasted in a general way with sincerity. Hence it might be allowable to render it more briefly, and I am not sure but that it might also be a better rendering, thus: Lie not one to another. He follows out, however, his argument as to the fellowship, which believers have in the death and resurrection of Christ, but employs other forms of expression.

The old man denotes — whatever we bring from our mother’s womb, and whatever we are by nature. 438 It is put off by all that are renewed by Christ. The new man, on the other hand, is that which is renewed by the Spirit of Christ to the obedience of righteousness, or it is nature restored to its true integrity by the same Spirit. The old man, however, comes first in order, because we are first born from Adam, and afterwards are born again through Christ. And as what we have from Adam becomes old, 439 and tends towards ruin, so what we obtain through Christ remains for ever, and is not frail; but, on the contrary, tends towards immortality. This passage is worthy of notice, inasmuch as a definition of regeneration may be gathered from it. For it contains two parts — the putting off of the old man, and the putting on of the new, and of these Paul here makes mention. It is also to be noticed, that the old man is distinguished by his works, as a tree is by its fruits. Hence it follows, that the depravity that is innate in us is denoted by the term old man

TSK: Col 3:9 - -- Lie : Lev 19:11; Isa 63:8; Jer 9:3-5; Zep 3:13; Zec 8:16; Joh 8:44; Eph 4:25; 1Ti 1:10; Tit 1:12, Tit 1:13; Rev 21:8, Rev 21:27, Rev 22:15 ye : Col 3:...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Col 3:9 - -- Lie not one to another - Notes, Eph 4:25. Seeing that ye have put off the old man with his deeds - Your former corrupt and evil nature; N...

Lie not one to another - Notes, Eph 4:25.

Seeing that ye have put off the old man with his deeds - Your former corrupt and evil nature; Notes, Eph 4:22. The reason for putting away lying, stated in Eph 4:25, is, that we "are members one of another"- or are brethren. The reason assigned here is, that we have put off the old man with his deeds. The sense is, that lying is one of the fruits of sin. It is that which the corrupt nature of man naturally produces; and when that is put off, then all that that nature produces should be also put off with it. The vice of lying is a universal fruit of sin, and seems to exist everywhere where the gospel does not prevail; compare the notes at Tit 1:12. There is, perhaps, no single form of sin that reigns so universally in the pagan world.

Poole: Col 3:9 - -- Lie not one to another: here he puts them upon laying aside that vice which violates the ninth commandment, being opposite to truth in word and work:...

Lie not one to another: here he puts them upon laying aside that vice which violates the ninth commandment, being opposite to truth in word and work: see Eph 4:25 , where he doth more fully urge the putting away lying, from the same argument that follows here: a lie being no other than that voluntary expression by word or deed, which accords not with the conception of the mind and heart, on purpose to deceive those with whom we do converse; contrary to the principles of a new creature, because God, after whose image he is renewed, hates it more than any vice, since it is contrary to truth, and proceeds from the father of lies, Psa 5:6 15:2 Pro 12:22 Joh 8:44 Rev 21:8,27 . They who in conversation do most stomach to be told of it, are most ordinarily guilty of it. But the apostle requires Christians indeed to put away all fraud and fallacy in commerce with men and one another, (as well as converse with God), that there may be in all due circumstances a just representation of that without which is conceived within, Eph 4:15 Jam 3:14 .

Seeing that ye have put off the old man with his deeds: the apostle subjoins his reason from the parts of regeneration or sanctification, viz.

1. Mortification, which he reassumes under an elegant metaphor, (intimating his solicitude to have the foregoing and the like vices to be wholly laid aside, as much as was possible in this life), borrowed from the putting off old and worn garments, which did as it were crawl with vermin; intimating that if the old man, as the cause, were put off with loathing, then those inordinate affections and actions which did proceed from it would also be removed; see on Rom 6:6,11 , with Eph 4:22 : if that which is born of the flesh and contrary to the Spirit, Joh 3:6 , with Gal 5:17 , then inordinate affections and lusts, Gal 5:24 .

(To see number 2: See Poole on "Col 3:10" ).

Gill: Col 3:9 - -- Lie not one to another.... Which is another vice of the tongue, and to which mankind are very prone, and ought not to be done to any, and particularly...

Lie not one to another.... Which is another vice of the tongue, and to which mankind are very prone, and ought not to be done to any, and particularly to one another; since the saints are members one of another, and of the same body, which makes the sin the more unnatural; of this vice; see Gill on Eph 4:25, and is another sin that is to be put off, or put away; that is to be abstained from, and not used. The arguments dissuading from this, and the rest, follow,

seeing that ye have put off the old man, with his deeds. The Syriac, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions read this as an exhortation, as they do the next verse also. Who is meant by the old man; see Gill on Rom 6:6, and what by putting him off; see Gill on Eph 4:22, and as for "his deeds", they are the same with the deceitful lusts there mentioned, and the works of the flesh in Gal 5:19 and with the members of the body of sin in the context, Col 3:5. Some, as Beza, think, that here is an allusion to the rite of baptism in the primitive church; which, as he truly observes, was performed not by aspersion, but immersion; and which required a putting off, and a putting on of clothes, and when the baptized persons professed to renounce the sins of the flesh, and their former conversation, and to live a new life.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

Geneva Bible: Col 3:9 Lie not one to another, ( 7 ) seeing that ye have put off the old man with his deeds; ( 7 ) A definition of our new birth taken from the parts of it,...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Col 3:1-25 - --1 He shows where we should seek Christ.5 He exhorts to mortification;10 to put off the old man, and put on Christ;12 exhorting to charity, humility, a...

Maclaren: Col 3:1-15 - --Risen With Christ If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. 2. Set your affe...

Maclaren: Col 3:5-9 - --II. The First Consequence Of The Risen Life Is Negative, The Death Or Putting Off' Of The Old Nature, The Life Which Belongs To And Is Ruled By Earth....

MHCC: Col 3:5-11 - --It is our duty to mortify our members which incline to the things of the world. Mortify them, kill them, suppress them, as weeds or vermin which sprea...

Matthew Henry: Col 3:8-11 - -- As we are to mortify inordinate appetites, so we are to mortify inordinate passions (Col 3:8): But now you also put off all these, anger wrath, mal...

Barclay: Col 3:5-9 - --Here this letter makes the change that Paul's letters always make; after the theology comes the ethical demand. Paul could think more deeply than an...

Barclay: Col 3:5-9 - --In Col 3:8Paul says that there are certain things of which the Colossians must strip themselves. The word he uses is the word for putting off clothes...

Barclay: Col 3:9-13 - --When a man becomes a Christian, there ought to be a complete change in his personality. He puts off his old self and puts on a new self, just as th...

Barclay: Col 3:9-13 - --Paul moves on to give his list of the great graces with which the Colossians must clothe themselves. Before we study the list in detail, we must not...

Constable: Col 3:5-17 - --B. The proper method 3:5-17 "3:1-4 has provided the perspective from which the daily life of the Colossi...

Constable: Col 3:5-11 - --1. Things to put off 3:5-11 On the basis of their position in Christ, Paul urged his readers to separate from the practices of their former way of lif...

College: Col 3:1-25 - --COLOSSIANS 3 VIII. SEEK THE THINGS ABOVE (3:1-4) 1 Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, where Christ is s...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: Colossians (Book Introduction) The Epistle to the Colossians From Rome a.d. 63 By Way of Introduction Genuineness The author claims to be Paul (Col_1:1) and there is no real...

JFB: Colossians (Book Introduction) The GENUINENESS of this Epistle is attested by JUSTIN MARTYR [Dialogue with Trypho, p. 311, B.], who quotes "the first-born of every creature," in ref...

JFB: Colossians (Outline) ADDRESS: INTRODUCTION: CONFIRMING EPAPHRAS' TEACHING: THE GLORIES OF CHRIST: THANKSGIVING AND PRAYER FOR THE COLOSSIANS: HIS OWN MINISTRY OF THE MYST...

TSK: Colossians (Book Introduction) Colosse was a large and populous city of Phrygia Pacatiana, in Asia Minor, seated on an eminence to the south of the river Meander. It is supposed to...

TSK: Colossians 3 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Col 3:1, He shows where we should seek Christ; Col 3:5, He exhorts to mortification; Col 3:10, to put off the old man, and put on Christ;...

Poole: Colossians 3 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 3

MHCC: Colossians (Book Introduction) This epistle was sent because of some difficulties which arose among the Colossians, probably from false teachers, in consequence of which they sent t...

MHCC: Colossians 3 (Chapter Introduction) (Col 3:1-4) The Colossians exhorted to be heavenly-minded. (Col 3:5-11) To mortify all corrupt affections. (Col 3:12-17) To live in mutual love, for...

Matthew Henry: Colossians (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Epistle of St. Paul to the Colossians Colosse was a considerable city of Phrygia, and probably not ...

Matthew Henry: Colossians 3 (Chapter Introduction) I. The apostle exhorts us to set our hearts upon heaven and take them off from this world (Col 3:1-4). II. He exhorts to the mortification of sin,...

Barclay: Colossians (Book Introduction) A GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE LETTERS OF PAUL The Letters Of Paul There is no more interesting body of documents in the New Testament than the letter...

Barclay: Colossians 3 (Chapter Introduction) The Risen Life (Col_3:1-4) Christ Our Life (Col_3:1-4 Continued) The Things Which Lie Behind (Col_3:5-9) The Things Which Must Be Left Behind (C...

Constable: Colossians (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical background The city of Colosse lay in the beautiful Lycus Vall...

Constable: Colossians (Outline) Outline I. Introduction 1:1-14 A. Salutation 1:1-2 B. Thanksgiving 1:3-8...

Constable: Colossians Colossians Bibliography Abbott, T. K. A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Epistles to the Ephesians and...

Haydock: Colossians (Book Introduction) THE EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL, THE APOSTLE, TO THE COLOSSIANS. INTRODUCTION. Colosse was a city of Phrygia, near Laodicea. It does not appear that ...

Gill: Colossians (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO COLOSSIANS The Colossians, to whom this epistle is written, were not the Rhodians, by some called Colossians, from Colossus, the la...

Gill: Colossians 3 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO COLOSSIANS 3 This chapter contains exhortations to several duties, some more general, which relate to all Christians, and others mo...

College: Colossians (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION THE CITY Colosse had been a thriving and important city several centuries before Christ, but by the time this letter was written its im...

College: Colossians (Outline) OUTLINE SALUTATION - 1:1-2 I. THANKSGIVING - 1:3-8 II. PAUL'S PRAYER FOR THE COLOSSIANS - 1:9-14 III. THE HYMN ABOUT CHRIST - 1:15-20 IV. ...

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