✦ The Hyperlinked Bible

Colossians 3:9-10 to Genesis 3:21

NT Text: Colossians 3:9-10

OT Source(s):

  • Genesis 3:21 (God clothing Adam and Eve with garments of skin)

Source: Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Reference Type: Echo

Connection Method(s): Typology (Providential Type, Backward-Looking) + Contrast

Significance: Paul's language of "stripping off the old self" (apekdysamenoi ton palaion anthrōpon) and "putting on the new self" (endysamenoi ton neon) in Colossians 3:9-10 echoes the garment theology inaugurated in Genesis 3:21, where God clothed Adam and Eve with "garments of skin" (kotnot or) after the Fall. The clothing metaphor in Genesis is freighted with theological meaning: God replaced the inadequate fig-leaf coverings with garments of his own provision, implying sacrifice and gracious covering of shame. Paul reverses and escalates this pattern: where Adam's sin required divine clothing to cover nakedness, believers in Christ "strip off" the fallen Adamic identity entirely and are reclothed with a "new self, which is being renewed in knowledge after the image of its creator" (Col 3:10). The reference to renewal "after the image" (kat' eikona) of the creator deliberately recalls Genesis 1:26-27, forming an inclusio with the original creation. The theological progression runs from creation in God's image (Gen 1:26-27), through the Fall and divine re-clothing (Gen 3:21), to new-creation re-clothing in Christ that restores the original image. Paul thus presents salvation as a re-creation that completes what the garments of skin could only symbolize — the full restoration of humanity's priestly vocation as God's image-bearers.