Dead to the World’s Rules: Understanding Colossians 2:20–23
“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’…?” (Col. 2:20–23, NKJV)
The Flow of Paul’s Argument
Colossians 2 is about one central truth: Christ is enough.
Earlier in the chapter, Paul reminds believers that:
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We are complete in Christ (Col. 2:10).
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The “handwriting of requirements” was nailed to the cross (Col. 2:14).
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Christ disarmed principalities and powers (Col. 2:15).
Then in Colossians 2:16–17, Paul mentions judgments regarding food, drink, festivals, new moons, and sabbaths—things connected with the ceremonial system that pointed forward to Christ.
By the time we reach verses 20–23, Paul is confronting a mindset: returning to religious regulations as if Christ had not already accomplished salvation.
Not About the Weekly Sabbath
The passage is not addressing the weekly seventh-day Sabbath established at Creation (Gen. 2:1–3). Instead, it concerns:
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Ritual purity regulations
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Festival observances
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New moon ceremonies
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Annual sabbaths tied to feast days
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Sacrificial requirements
These were part of the ceremonial framework fulfilled in Christ (Heb. 10:1).
Paul’s concern is not obedience rooted in love for God. His concern is reliance on external rituals as a means of spiritual advancement or salvation.
“Do Not Touch, Do Not Taste, Do Not Handle”
These phrases point to ascetic and purity rules—many of which went beyond Scripture itself.
During the time of Christ, the Pharisees had developed layers of traditions. Jesus directly confronted this in Gospel of Mark 7:6–8, saying:
“You lay aside the commandment of God, and hold the tradition of men.”
Some examples of Pharisaical man-made rules included:
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Elaborate ceremonial handwashing rituals before eating.
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Strict Sabbath travel limits beyond biblical instruction.
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Detailed classifications of work not specified in the Law.
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Rules about contact with certain objects or people deemed “unclean.”
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Expansions of dietary laws beyond what Moses commanded.
These traditions were later preserved in writings like the Mishnah, but they were already influential in Jesus’ day.
Paul calls these “commandments and doctrines of men” (Col. 2:22). They had an appearance of wisdom—self-denial, humility, strictness—but they did not transform the heart.
The Real Problem: False Spirituality
Notice Paul’s description:
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Self-imposed religion
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False humility
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Neglect of the body
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No value against the indulgence of the flesh
In plain terms: external rule-keeping without inner transformation doesn’t produce holiness.
You can restrict behavior and still have pride, envy, lust, and bitterness ruling the heart.
Christ changes the inside out. Legalism tries to change the outside in.
A Modern Mirror: Our Own Man-Made Rules
We need to be honest. Churches today are not immune.
Some congregations enforce unwritten codes such as:
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Certain musical styles automatically being labeled “sinful.”
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Dress expectations treated as measures of righteousness.
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Cultural preferences elevated to moral law.
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Extra-biblical lifestyle standards presented as salvational requirements.
Modesty and reverence matter. Worship principles matter. But when cultural standards become tests of salvation, we are repeating the same mistake Paul condemned.
The Pharisees didn’t wake up one day trying to replace God’s law. They started with “good intentions”—protecting holiness. But they ended up binding consciences where God had not spoken.
That’s the danger.
The Core Issue: Where Is Your Confidence?
Paul’s message is direct:
If you died with Christ, why return to systems that treat spirituality as rule compliance?
Salvation is not:
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Food regulations
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Festival observance
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Ritual purity
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Self-denial for its own sake
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Church-enforced cultural codes
Salvation is Christ crucified and risen.
Obedience flows from relationship, not from fear-based regulation.
A Balanced Conclusion
This passage does not abolish God’s moral law. It does not dismiss reverence, modesty, or order. It does not attack sincere obedience.
It confronts this mindset:
“If I follow enough external regulations, I will secure spiritual standing.”
That mindset died at the cross.
Christ fulfilled the ceremonial system. He exposed man-made religious control. He freed believers from bondage to human regulations disguised as holiness.
The question for us is simple:
Are we building faith in Christ—or building fences around people that God never commanded?
Because Paul is clear:
Rules made by men may look spiritual.
But only Christ makes us alive.




