Verse explainer

What does Colossians 3:17 really mean?

"Do all in the name of Jesus" isn't a magic phrase to recite — it means doing everything as his disciple, seeking his will, relying on his strength.

KJV

And whatsoever ye do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God and the Father by him.

BSB

And whatever you do, in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through Him.

Paul has just finished listing specific virtues (vv. 12–16) — compassion, humility, forgiveness, love — and now he caps the whole section with a sweeping principle: everything goes under the lordship of Christ. "In the name of the Lord Jesus" is not an incantation attached to prayers. Jamieson, Fausset and Brown capture it well: it means acting as a disciple called by his name, seeking his guidance and approval, desiring to honor him. That covers the full range — conversation, work, worship, ordinary daily action. The verse closes with thanksgiving through Christ as the channel, which John Gill notes is the only way such offerings reach God acceptably. This makes the verse less a ritual instruction and more a posture: nothing in the believer's life sits outside Christ's domain.

"In the name of Jesus" means you should end every prayer with those words. The phrase has been narrowed in popular practice to a closing formula for prayers — as though saying "in Jesus' name, amen" is the requirement Paul has in mind. But Paul says to do everything — word, deed, the entirety of daily life — in the name of the Lord Jesus. Jamieson, Fausset and Brown define it as acting as a disciple called by his name, seeking his guidance and approval. Adam Clarke calls it beginning and ending all things with Christ, praying for his direction in everything undertaken. If it were only a liturgical tag, it could not apply equally to conversations, work, and civil actions as Paul plainly intends. The misreading shrinks a whole-life principle of discipleship into a ritual punctuation mark. The real call is posture, not formula: does this word or deed belong to Christ? Is it being done in reliance on him, for his honor? That is the question the verse puts to every moment.
Adam Clarkeearly 19th c. · PD

Clarke reads "in the name of the Lord Jesus" as a call to begin and end all things with Christ — invoking his name, praying for his direction and support in every undertaking. He points out that doing everything in God's name and referring everything to his glory is as rational as it is pious, insisting that even thanksgiving must ascend to God through Christ as Mediator, not on its own.

John Gill18th c. · PD

Gill broadens the scope deliberately: "word or deed" takes in preaching, hearing the Gospel, singing, conversation, and every civil or religious action throughout life. Acting "in the name" means acting in Christ's strength, according to his revealed will, calling on him for assistance, and having his honor and glory solely in view. Gill also notes that giving thanks here is distinct from the singing of the preceding verse — it is its own obligation.

Jamieson, Fausset & Brown19th c. · PD

JFB ties the phrase to discipleship identity: to act in Christ's name is to act as one who bears his name, seeks his guidance, and desires his approval. They cross-reference Romans 14:8 and 1 Corinthians 10:31 to show this is a consistent Pauline principle — the believer's entire existence is oriented toward the Lord, not merely the religious portions of it.

ὄνομα onoma

"Name." In Jewish and early Christian usage, a person's name carried their character, authority, and representation — not merely a label. To act "in the name" of someone was to act as their authorized representative, under their authority and in their character. This is why the phrase cannot be reduced to a verbal formula: it describes a whole orientation of life under Christ's lordship, not a tag appended to prayers.