Sabbath School
Standing in All the Will of God
Lesson 13 - Tuesday
Standing Perfect and Complete
Read Colossians 4:12–13
In his closing words, Paul highlights a man who never stood in the spotlight but carried immense spiritual weight—Epaphras. He is described as one who was “always laboring fervently” in prayer. That phrase alone tells you something important: real spiritual strength is often built in private, not in public.
A Clear Purpose
Epaphras had a focused burden for believers—that they might “stand perfect and complete in all the will of God.” This wasn’t casual or occasional concern. It was intentional, persistent, and costly. The word “laboring” suggests struggle, like an athlete straining toward victory. Prayer, in this sense, is not passive—it is active work.
How It Is Accomplished
Notice how this purpose is achieved: not through control, pressure, or persuasion—but through prayer. Epaphras understood something many overlook: transformation is God’s work, but prayer is how we participate in it. He didn’t try to fix people; he brought them before God.
Standing
To stand means stability. It’s the picture of a believer who is not easily shaken—grounded in truth, steady in faith. In a world of constant pressure and compromise, standing doesn’t happen by accident. It comes from being anchored in God through consistent communion with Him.
Perfected
“Perfect” here doesn’t mean flawless—it means mature. Spiritually grown. Someone who has moved beyond spiritual infancy into deeper understanding and obedience. Growth like this takes time, but it also takes intentional surrender.
Complete
To be complete is to be fully formed, not lacking what truly matters. Many people chase completeness through success, relationships, or achievements—but real completeness is found only in alignment with God’s will.
All the Will of God
This is the heart of it all. Not some of God’s will. Not the convenient parts. All of it. Epaphras prayed that believers wouldn’t live partially surrendered lives, but fully yielded ones. That’s where true strength, clarity, and peace are found.
If you’re honest, this is where things get challenging. Most people want God’s blessings without full obedience. But you don’t become spiritually complete by accident—you become it by consistently choosing God’s will over your own.
What This Means for You
Take a hard look at your own life. Are you standing firm, or constantly wavering? Are you growing, or just maintaining? Are you fully surrendered, or holding parts back?
And just as importantly—who are you laboring in prayer for? Epaphras didn’t just focus on his own walk; he fought for others spiritually. That’s a level of care most people never reach.
If you want to see real change—in yourself and others—it starts here: persistent, focused, faith-filled prayer.
Prayer
Lord,
Teach me to stand firm in You, not swayed by the pressures around me. Grow me into spiritual maturity, shaping my heart and mind to reflect Your truth. Make me complete—not lacking anything that You desire for my life. Help me to seek not just parts of Your will, but all of it, even when it challenges me. And give me the burden and discipline to pray fervently for others, just as Epaphras did.
In Jesus’ name,
Amen.




