Colossians 3:1-17, encourages us to focus on heavenly life with Christ; true life hidden, glorious. Reject sinful nature, embrace renewal in Christ; unity and transformation define new life. Clothe yourselves with love, forgiveness, humility, and Christ’s peace. Let Christ’s message guide all; live gratefully as his representatives.
I'm going to gramma Gail's church in Edina with Tony today. At this church they take communion every week and hold the sacrament with Holy Reverence. We had breakfast yesterday and talked about how the Bible shapes our thinking and renews our minds as we worship in the Word (Romans 12:1-4).
Communion is taking God's word to heart (John 6:56), faith comes by hearing the word about Christ (Romans 10:17). Just as every human birth has two parents, so divine birth has two parents: the Word of God and the Spirit of God. "That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit (John 3:6).", "for you have been born again [that is, reborn from above—spiritually transformed, renewed, and set apart for His purpose] not of seed which is perishable but [from that which is] imperishable and immortal, that is, through the living and everlasting word of God. (1 Peter 1:23 AMP)" - God’s Word nourishes our souls and renews our mind (Revelation 10:9-11)
Enjoying thinking about the plumb line in scripture (Isaiah 28:17, Amos 7:7-9) as I was reading Mystery of Christ's body being revealed (Rev 10:7, Eph 1:9–10, Rom 1:16-17)
A plumb line is a ancient builder's tool: a weighted string dropped vertically to establish a perfectly straight, true line. Builders used it to check whether a wall was genuinely upright or dangerously crooked. In Scripture, God borrows this image powerfully as a metaphor for divine judgment and moral standard.
Amos 7:7-9 — The Wall That Cannot Stand
In Amos's vision, God stands beside a wall holding a plumb line and asks, "What do you see, Amos?" The answer: God is setting his plumb line against Israel. The meaning is stark:
- Israel was once built straight, according to God's covenant standards
- But the nation has drifted so far from true that it cannot be corrected
- God declares he will "spare them no longer" — the wall must come down
The specific judgment that follows (v. 9) targets the high places, sanctuaries, and the house of Jeroboam — the centers of false worship and corrupt leadership. The plumb line exposes that Israel's religion and governance are structurally unsound.
Isaiah 28:17 — Justice and Righteousness as the Standard
In Isaiah, God announces he will make justice the measuring line and righteousness the plumb line. The context is a rebuke of Jerusalem's leaders who have made a "covenant with death" — trusting in lies and false alliances rather than God. The plumb line here does two things:
- It sets the positive standard: God's kingdom and his anointed cornerstone (v. 16) will be built on justice and righteousness
- It demolishes the false: the hail will sweep away the refuge of lies, because nothing built crooked will survive God's measurement
The Theological Core
Taken together, the plumb line passages teach several things:
God has an objective standard. The plumb line isn't arbitrary. It represents God's own character — his justice, righteousness, and covenant faithfulness — against which all human structures (nations, worship, leadership, moral life) are measured.
Deviation accumulates and eventually collapses. A wall slightly off plumb may stand for a while, but the further it leans, the more certain its fall. Both Amos and Isaiah address nations that had drifted gradually but were now past the point of self-correction.
Judgment is diagnostic before it is punitive. God holds up the plumb line not out of cruelty but because a crooked wall is a danger to those living under it. True love requires honest measurement.
The standard also points to hope. In Isaiah 28, the plumb line is tied to the cornerstone God lays in Zion (v. 16) — quoted in the New Testament as a reference to Christ (1 Peter 2:6; Romans 9:33). The one who is the true standard is also the one who builds the only wall that will last.
The plumb line is ultimately God saying: I know what straight looks like, and I am measuring.
Lord help me to take your Word seriously and reverently today. Amen.