Colossians Chapter 4

As Martin Luther King might have preached it

A collaboration between Lewis McLain & AI

“Remember My Chains”

I. A Room, a Chain, and a Word That Would Not Be Bound

Come with me this morning to a little rented room in the city of Rome. I want you to see it. There is no stained glass in that room. There is no great organ, no robed choir, no procession down a marble aisle. There is a low lamp burning down toward its last hour. There is a soldier at the door. There is an old man sitting on a hard floor. And there is a chain. And that chain is wrapped cold around the wrist of a preacher named Paul.

Now somebody walking past that room might look in and say, well, that’s the end of it. Somebody might look at that iron and say, the gospel has finally been stopped, they have shut the old man up at last. The empire looked at Paul and saw a prisoner. The empire counted him finished, filed away, forgotten in a back room of the capital.

But I have come to tell you this morning that you can chain a man, but you cannot chain the Word of God! You can bind two wrists, but you cannot bind the truth. You can lock the door, but the gospel slips right out through the keyhole. They had Paul’s hands — they never laid a finger on his message. For out of that very room, off of that very floor, in the shadow of that very chain, there came a letter that we are still reading two thousand years later. The soldier went home and was forgotten. The chain rusted away into nothing. But the Word — the Word marches on!

II. The Praying Prisoner

And I want you to notice what this man does with his chains. He does not curse. He does not despair. He prays. He says to that little church, devote yourselves to prayer. Now the Greek word there is a strong word. It means to cling, to hold fast, to refuse to let go. He is not talking about a casual word tossed up toward heaven when the trouble gets deep. He is talking about a prayer that grips, a prayer that endures, a prayer that keeps watch through the long night the way a watchman stands his post on the city wall — eyes open, awake, waiting. Because the watchman knows something the sleeping city does not know: morning is coming!

And then he says, keep your prayer full of thanksgiving. Now think about that. A man in chains, telling free people to be thankful. The world says be thankful when the chains come off. Paul says be thankful while they are still on. For he had learned, somewhere down in the deep places of the soul, that gratitude is not a response to your circumstances — gratitude is a defiance of them. When you can give thanks in the prison, you have a freedom the jailer can never touch.

And here is the wonder of it. When this chained man finally asks them to pray for him, what do you suppose he asks for? You would think he would say, pray that these chains fall off. You would think he would say, pray that the trial goes well, pray that Caesar shows mercy, pray that I get to go home. But that is not what he says. He says: pray that God would open a door for the word. Here is a man behind a locked door, and the only door he is interested in is the one the gospel can walk through! He does not pray for his own freedom. He prays for the freedom of the message. Oh, that we had hearts like that this morning.

III. Salt on the Tongue

Then Paul turns and he says something to us about the way we talk to one another and to the world. He says, let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt. I want to stay right here a moment, because the church needs to hear this.

There is a way of being right that is so bitter that nobody can swallow it. There is a way of holding the truth that is so cold and so hard that it freezes the very people it was meant to save. Some folks have got the truth, but they have lost the grace, and they go through the world like a sharp wind in January, and everywhere they pass, something good shrivels up and dies.

But Paul says: put some salt in it! Salt does two things, beloved. Salt preserves — it keeps a thing from going rotten. And salt gives flavor — it makes a thing worth tasting. He is saying, let your words preserve what is good and let them have a savor that makes the stranger lean in instead of turning away. Speak the truth, yes — but speak it so that grace drips off of every syllable. Speak so that the man who disagrees with you still wants to keep listening. That is the speech of a gospel people. Not bland — salt has flavor. Not bitter — salt heals the wound. But seasoned, gracious, full of mercy, so that you know how to answer each and every soul that God sends across your path.

IV. The Roll Call of the Faithful

And now — oh, now watch what happens. The chained man begins to call the roll. And I want you to listen to these names, because there is a sermon hiding inside this list.

He calls Tychicus, the faithful one, sent to carry comfort to people he had never met. He calls Onesimus — and church, do you know who Onesimus was? He was a runaway. He was a slave who fled his master, a man the world had written off as a criminal. And Paul does not call him a runaway. Paul calls him a beloved brother. Grace took a fugitive and made him family! That is what this gospel does. It takes the one who ran and brings him home.

He calls Aristarchus, in chains right there beside him — a man who chose to share the suffering. He calls Mark. Now you remember Mark. Mark is the one who quit. Mark is the young man who turned back, who abandoned the mission, who failed when the going got hard. And here he is again, restored, useful, written into the honor roll. Because our God is the God of the second chance! The God who does not throw a man away because he stumbled once. He calls Luke, the beloved physician, the doctor who stayed. And he calls Epaphras — and it says Epaphras is down on his knees, wrestling in prayer, agonizing, laboring for three little towns he could not even get to in person.

Do you see it? They thought they had Paul alone. They thought they had isolated him, shut him away from every friend. But this man in his lonely cell was surrounded — surrounded by the faithful, surrounded by the restored, surrounded by the praying. The world could lock the door, but it could not make him lonely. For wherever the people of God are bound together in love, no prison wall is thick enough to make a child of God truly alone.

V. “Remember My Chains”

And then we come to the end. The letter is almost finished. And Paul takes the pen out of the scribe’s hand, and with his own bound, cramping fingers, he writes the closing words himself. And I want you to hear what he writes. He does not write, pity me. He does not write, feel sorry for the poor old preacher. He writes three words that I cannot get past this morning. He writes: Remember my chains.

Remember. Remember that the gospel you hold so lightly in your hands cost somebody something. Remember that the freedom you sing about on Sunday morning was carried to you by men who wore irons. Remember that grace is free — it is gloriously, wonderfully free — but it was never, ever cheap. Somebody paid. Somebody bled. Somebody sat on a cold floor in Rome so that the message could run to you across the centuries.

And is that not the whole story of this faith? A Savior who wore our chains so that we could go free. A Christ who took the prison of our sin upon Himself, who hung bound upon a tree, who looked down across all the ages and said, in effect, remember. Remember the cost. Remember the love that paid it.

VI. The Benediction

So I am going to leave you this morning the way Paul left them. After the chains, after the roll call, after the long night in that little room, he writes one last line. And it is not a complaint. It is a blessing. He says: Grace be with you.

Grace be with you in your own chains, whatever they are. Grace be with you in the long night, when the lamp burns low. Grace be with you when the world says you are finished and forgotten. For the same grace that walked out of a Roman prison and ran to the ends of the earth is walking with you still.

The chains could not hold him. And they will not hold you.

Walk on, church. Walk on.

A Closing Prayer

O God, our gracious and eternal Father, we come before You this morning with bowed heads and open hearts. We thank You for the old preacher in the Roman cell, and we thank You that his chains could not silence Your Word.

Grant us, O Lord, a portion of his faith. Teach us to pray as he prayed — not first for our own comfort, but for an open door, that the message of love might run free in a world that has locked so many doors against it. Season our speech with the salt of grace, that our words might heal and never wound, that we might speak truth so tenderly that even those who differ from us would want to keep on listening.

Make us, O God, a people of the second chance — quick to restore the one who stumbled, slow to write any soul off as finished. And when our own chains come, as come they will, let us not curse the darkness, but light the candle of thanksgiving and hold fast until the morning breaks.

We remember the cost, O Lord. We remember the love that paid it. And we ask only this: that whatever binds us, You would walk beside us still, until that great day when every chain is broken and every prisoner goes free.

These things we ask in the name of the One who wore our chains that we might go free. Amen, and amen.

Thoughts, Prayers, and Action: A Christian Response to Tragedy

Please Lord, watch over our community, especially our children.

When tragedy strikes—whether in a school, a church, or on the streets of our cities—Christians instinctively turn to prayer. We believe that God hears the cries of His people, and that no tear shed, no anguished word whispered in prayer is wasted. Yet in moments like the recent killings in Minneapolis, many voices rise in frustration, declaring, “thoughts and prayers are not enough.”

As a follower of Christ, I must confess that this critique deserves a hearing. If by “thoughts and prayers” we mean little more than polite condolences, quickly offered and soon forgotten, then indeed they are not enough. Scripture never intended prayer to be a substitute for action. James writes plainly: “Suppose a brother or sister is without clothes and daily food. If one of you says to them, ‘Go in peace; keep warm and well fed,’ but does nothing about their physical needs, what good is it?” (James 2:15–16). Prayer without action is incomplete; faith without works is dead.


The True Role of Prayer

Prayer is not meant to end our response; it is meant to begin it. Prayer is the act of bringing unbearable sorrow before the throne of God, confessing our weakness, and seeking divine strength. It is through prayer that we discern God’s heart for justice, compassion, and peace. It is through prayer that we ask for courage to move beyond words and into deeds.

Far from being empty, prayer acknowledges that human wisdom and political effort alone cannot heal the deepest wounds of the human heart. Prayer points us to the One who alone can turn hatred into love, despair into hope, violence into reconciliation. But if prayer never moves us to concrete acts of mercy and justice, then we have misunderstood its purpose.


Please Lord, Change the hearts of evil.

What Christians Ask for in Prayer After a Massacre

When we say we are praying for the families, school workers, and community after the massacre of children, we are not merely repeating empty phrases. We are interceding with specific and urgent pleas before God:

  • For the families of the children: that God would surround them with His comfort, the “peace that surpasses all understanding” (Philippians 4:7), when their world has collapsed. That He would give them strength to face the unthinkable days ahead—funerals, empty bedrooms, and grief that threatens to crush their very breath.
  • For the school workers and first responders: that God would bind up the trauma they carry in their bodies and minds after witnessing scenes that will never leave them. That He would guard them against despair, give them counselors and companions, and remind them that their labor to protect children is not in vain.
  • For the community: that God would heal the very soil of the city, that fear will not take root, that division and blame will not destroy neighbors, and that leaders would rise up who work for reconciliation and renewal. That the church would be a beacon of hope, providing food for the grieving, arms for the weary, and truth for the confused.

Prayer in such a moment is not resignation—it is petition. It is crying out to the Lord of heaven and earth to move in ways we cannot. It is asking Him to step into unbearable suffering and carry those who cannot walk.


What Can Be Done to Prevent Such Tragedies?

Christians must also look upstream: what can be done to prevent massacres like this from happening at all? While we cannot erase the reality of evil in a fallen world, there are faithful steps we can take:

  • Spiritual formation and discipleship: Our homes, churches, and schools must raise children in love, teaching them to value life, to resolve conflict with peace, and to find their worth in God rather than in violence or power.
  • Stronger communities: When young people are isolated, wounded, or neglected, seeds of destruction can grow. The church can invest in mentoring, after-school care, youth ministries, and safe spaces where children and families are supported.
  • Care for mental health: Christians can advocate for accessible counseling and trauma care, remembering that Jesus Himself ministered to the brokenhearted.
  • Moral courage in public life: We can encourage policies that protect human life and limit access to instruments of mass violence, while still affirming human dignity and responsibility.
  • Peacemaking witness: In a culture saturated with anger and division, Christians can model reconciliation—speaking truth with grace, rejecting hatred, and showing the world that the way of Christ is the way of peace.

No set of actions will completely eradicate violence. Yet, by God’s grace, we can restrain evil, cultivate peace, and create communities where tragedies are less likely to erupt.


Responding to the Critique

So when someone says, “thoughts and prayers are not enough,” my Christian response is not to be defensive but to agree in part. They are right: prayer is not enough if it remains mere sentiment. But they are also missing the deeper truth: prayer is more than words—it is the lifeblood of action. Without it, we risk striving in our own strength, detached from God’s wisdom and power.

As Christians, we should embrace both sides: authentic prayer that intercedes for the grieving and the broken, and faithful action that works for justice and peace. Prayer without action is hypocrisy, but action without prayer is arrogance. The world needs both.


A Prayer for the Families, School, and Community

Heavenly Father, our hearts are broken before You. Children have been taken in violence, and we struggle to even breathe under the weight of this loss. Lord, we lift up the families whose lives are torn apart. Hold them in Your arms as a mother holds her child. Give them strength to face the hours ahead and hope to believe that life is still worth living. Surround them with friends who will not leave, with churches that will not abandon, with a peace that does not vanish when the tears come at night.

We pray for the teachers, the school staff, and the first responders who saw the unthinkable. Lord, heal their minds, protect them from despair, and let their courage not be forgotten. Wrap them in Your love and remind them that their work is holy in Your sight.

We pray for the community of Minneapolis. Drive out fear, drive out division, and plant seeds of healing where the soil feels barren. Raise up leaders who will stand for peace and neighbors who will look after one another. May the church rise to its calling: to comfort the hurting, to weep with those who weep, and to shine the light of Christ in the darkest of nights.

And Lord, we pray not only for healing but for prevention. Teach us as a nation to value life as You value it. Lead us to build homes where love is strong, schools where children are safe, communities where the lonely are not abandoned. Show us how to break cycles of violence and how to offer young people hope before despair hardens into destruction.

Come, Lord Jesus. Heal our land. Let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like a mighty stream. May Your kingdom come, and Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.

In the name of Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace, we pray. Amen.Thoughts, Prayers, and Action: A Christian Response to Tragedy

When tragedy strikes—whether in a school, a church, or on the streets of our cities—Christians instinctively turn to prayer. We believe that God hears the cries of His people, and that no tear shed, no anguished word whispered in prayer is wasted. Yet in moments like the recent killings in Minneapolis, many voices rise in frustration, declaring, “thoughts and prayers are not enough.”

As a follower of Christ, I must confess that this critique deserves a hearing. If by “thoughts and prayers” we mean little more than polite condolences, quickly offered and soon forgotten, then indeed they are not enough. Scripture never intended prayer to be a substitute for action. James writes plainly: “Suppose a brother or sister is without clothes and daily food. If one of you says to them, ‘Go in peace; keep warm and well fed,’ but does nothing about their physical needs, what good is it?” (James 2:15–16). Prayer without action is incomplete; faith without works is dead.


The True Role of Prayer

Prayer is not meant to end our response; it is meant to begin it. Prayer is the act of bringing unbearable sorrow before the throne of God, confessing our weakness, and seeking divine strength. It is through prayer that we discern God’s heart for justice, compassion, and peace. It is through prayer that we ask for courage to move beyond words and into deeds.

Far from being empty, prayer acknowledges that human wisdom and political effort alone cannot heal the deepest wounds of the human heart. Prayer points us to the One who alone can turn hatred into love, despair into hope, violence into reconciliation. But if prayer never moves us to concrete acts of mercy and justice, then we have misunderstood its purpose.


What Christians Ask for in Prayer After a Massacre

When we say we are praying for the families, school workers, and community after the massacre of children, we are not merely repeating empty phrases. We are interceding with specific and urgent pleas before God:

  • For the families of the children: that God would surround them with His comfort, the “peace that surpasses all understanding” (Philippians 4:7), when their world has collapsed. That He would give them strength to face the unthinkable days ahead—funerals, empty bedrooms, and grief that threatens to crush their very breath.
  • For the school workers and first responders: that God would bind up the trauma they carry in their bodies and minds after witnessing scenes that will never leave them. That He would guard them against despair, give them counselors and companions, and remind them that their labor to protect children is not in vain.
  • For the community: that God would heal the very soil of the city, that fear will not take root, that division and blame will not destroy neighbors, and that leaders would rise up who work for reconciliation and renewal. That the church would be a beacon of hope, providing food for the grieving, arms for the weary, and truth for the confused.

Prayer in such a moment is not resignation—it is petition. It is crying out to the Lord of heaven and earth to move in ways we cannot. It is asking Him to step into unbearable suffering and carry those who cannot walk.


“Here I am, Lord, send me!” Isaiah 6:8

What Can Be Done to Prevent Such Tragedies?

Christians must also look upstream: what can be done to prevent massacres like this from happening at all? While we cannot erase the reality of evil in a fallen world, there are faithful steps we can take:

  • Spiritual formation and discipleship: Our homes, churches, and schools must raise children in love, teaching them to value life, to resolve conflict with peace, and to find their worth in God rather than in violence or power.
  • Stronger communities: When young people are isolated, wounded, or neglected, seeds of destruction can grow. The church can invest in mentoring, after-school care, youth ministries, and safe spaces where children and families are supported.
  • Care for mental health: Christians can advocate for accessible counseling and trauma care, remembering that Jesus Himself ministered to the brokenhearted.
  • Moral courage in public life: We can encourage policies that protect human life and limit access to instruments of mass violence, while still affirming human dignity and responsibility.
  • Peacemaking witness: In a culture saturated with anger and division, Christians can model reconciliation—speaking truth with grace, rejecting hatred, and showing the world that the way of Christ is the way of peace.

No set of actions will completely eradicate violence. Yet, by God’s grace, we can restrain evil, cultivate peace, and create communities where tragedies are less likely to erupt.


Responding to the Critique

So when someone says, “thoughts and prayers are not enough,” my Christian response is not to be defensive but to agree in part. They are right: prayer is not enough if it remains mere sentiment. But they are also missing the deeper truth: prayer is more than words—it is the lifeblood of action. Without it, we risk striving in our own strength, detached from God’s wisdom and power.

As Christians, we should embrace both sides: authentic prayer that intercedes for the grieving and the broken, and faithful action that works for justice and peace. Prayer without action is hypocrisy, but action without prayer is arrogance. The world needs both.


A Prayer for the Families, School, and Community

Heavenly Father, our hearts are broken before You. Children have been taken in violence, and we struggle to even breathe under the weight of this loss. Lord, we lift up the families whose lives are torn apart. Hold them in Your arms as a mother holds her child. Give them strength to face the hours ahead and hope to believe that life is still worth living. Surround them with friends who will not leave, with churches that will not abandon, with a peace that does not vanish when the tears come at night.

We pray for the teachers, the school staff, and the first responders who saw the unthinkable. Lord, heal their minds, protect them from despair, and let their courage not be forgotten. Wrap them in Your love and remind them that their work is holy in Your sight.

We pray for the community of Minneapolis. Drive out fear, drive out division, and plant seeds of healing where the soil feels barren. Raise up leaders who will stand for peace and neighbors who will look after one another. May the church rise to its calling: to comfort the hurting, to weep with those who weep, and to shine the light of Christ in the darkest of nights.

And Lord, we pray not only for healing but for prevention. Teach us as a nation to value life as You value it. Lead us to build homes where love is strong, schools where children are safe, communities where the lonely are not abandoned. Show us how to break cycles of violence and how to offer young people hope before despair hardens into destruction.

Come, Lord Jesus. Heal our land. Let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like a mighty stream. May Your kingdom come, and Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.

In the name of Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace, we pray. Amen.