Uniting Heaven and Earth
Christ in Philippians and Colossians
Lesson 8 - Tuesday
Firstborn Over All Creation
Read Colossians 1:15–17 slowly and you’ll see that Paul is not minimizing Christ—he is exalting Him. He writes that Jesus is “the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. For by Him all things were created… All things were created through Him and for Him. And He is before all things, and in Him all things consist” (NKJV).
When Paul calls Jesus “the firstborn,” he is not saying Christ was created. The very next lines make that impossible. If all things were created by Him, then He cannot be part of the created order. In Scripture, “firstborn” often means rank, authority, and inheritance rights. It speaks of supremacy, not origin. Paul is declaring that Christ holds the highest place over all creation because He made it, sustains it, and stands before it in eternity.
Notice the reasons Paul gives:
First, Jesus is the image of the invisible God. If you want to know what God is like, look at Christ.
Second, all things were created by Him—things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible. He is not part of the system; He is the architect of it.
Third, all things were created for Him. Creation exists for His glory and purpose.
Fourth, He is before all things. He is eternal.
Fifth, in Him all things consist—He holds everything together. The universe continues because He wills it to.
Now let that sink in: the One who spoke galaxies into existence is the One who hung on a cross.
God, the Creator, died for us.
What could our works possibly add to that?
If the infinite Creator has already given Himself as the full and final sacrifice, then any attempt to “add” to His finished work is not humility—it is arrogance. It suggests that His cross was insufficient. It implies that human effort can improve upon divine redemption. That is why the idea is not just mistaken—it is blasphemous. It diminishes the glory of Christ and elevates human effort to a place it does not belong.
Our obedience matters—but not as a contribution to salvation. It is the fruit of gratitude, not the price of redemption. We obey because we are saved, not in order to complete what Jesus supposedly left unfinished. The cross was not a down payment. It was a declaration: “It is finished.”
When you understand who Christ is—the Creator, Sustainer, Eternal One—you stop trying to compete with Him and start surrendering to Him. You stop striving to earn and start trusting. You stop boasting in works and start boasting in the Lord.
If He holds the universe together, He can hold your life together. Your role is not to add to His work. Your role is to believe it, receive it, and live in grateful obedience.
Prayer
Lord Jesus, Firstborn over all creation, You are before all things and above all things. You created the world and yet chose to die for me. Forgive me for the times I have tried to add to Your finished work with my own efforts and pride. Teach me to rest fully in what You have accomplished on the cross. Let my obedience flow from gratitude, not from fear or self-righteousness. Hold my life together as You hold the universe together, and help me live for Your glory alone. Amen.




