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Category Archives: Sermons

More than conquerors, Romans 8: 31-39

Jun

14

2020

thebeachfellowship

This is such an amazing passage of scripture, that it is really difficult to boil it down to just one principle or doctrine.  It really is the summary of Paul’s gospel or good news, up to this point.  In this passage he gives us a continuing string of assurances and blessings and benefits for those who have been saved. In this chapter he is actually presenting the various stages of our salvation, from justification to sanctification, to our glorification.  And this summary reaches it’s crescendo in these last verses which talk about the surety and guarantee of our salvation because of God’s love for us.

We have been studying this chapter for a few weeks now, and while it is beneficial to break it down verse by verse and really examine in detail each of the doctrines presented here, the downside is that it’s possible to lose sight of the magnificence of the totality of what God has done in Christ Jesus for us.  It’s like listening to a symphony of a great piece of classical music, and skipping the earlier parts and just listening to the last segment when it reaches it’s crescendo.  That might be an interesting way to listen, but I think you would miss the various parts building up to the great climax.

So before we look today at the climax of Paul’s presentation of our salvation, let me first go back to the beginning of chapter 8 and just remind you of the highlights there, and that will hopefully serve to set up the grand finale.

Starting in vs 1, Paul talks about the beginning of our salvation, which is our justification, and said there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. No condemnation! Consider that! All my transgressions, all my sins, all my shortcomings, all are wiped clean by Jesus Christ.  He paid my debt, and even further, God transferred His righteousness to my account.  

Furthermore, he says in vs 11 that having been made righteous, God has given us the means of sanctification, by His Spirit to indwell us.  Think of that!  The Spirit of the Living God has been given to indwell us that we might have spiritual life, that we might live righteously through His power working in us.

And the fact that the Spirit indwells sets up the blessing of sonship. Vs 14, “For all who are being led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God.”  Paul goes on to enumerate the tremendous blessings we are guaranteed as the children of God.  Those blessings include the immediate and intimate access to God as our heavenly Father.  And furthermore, that as children of God we share in the inheritance of Christ.  Imagine that!  The inheritance of Christ is to be shared with us – former slaves, former enemies of God, but now adopted into HIs family, made co heirs with Jesus Christ.

But part of what we share with Christ is the sufferings of Christ.  And that suffering is also a blessing.  It is a privilege to share in Christ’s sufferings, for to the degree that we suffer with Him, we shall also share in His glory.  vs 17, and if  [we are] children, [then] heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with [Him] so that we may also be glorified with Him.”

And even suffering is a blessing,  because as vs 28 tells us, God is working all things together for good to those that love Him and are called according to His purpose.  Just think of that!  God uses our weaknesses, our sufferings,  even things that were meant as evil towards us, to conform us to the image of Jesus Christ.  In the process of our sanctification, God uses all things to work together for good, for His purpose.

And  His purpose – HIs eternal plan for us – is to bring many sons to the glory of His kingdom. He has predetermined that we would be His children from eternity past, and He has worked all things after the counsel of His will, so that those whom He foreknew, He also predestined, and those He predestined, He also called, and those He called, He also justified, and those He justified, He also glorified. God is the author and finisher of our salvation.  Our future is a certainty, so that God speaks of our glorification as though it has already been finalized.  Imagine that!  God’s plan is for our good, to give us a future and a hope, and it is certain and guaranteed by HIs word which cannot fail.

Now we come to the crescendo. And Paul himself seems to almost be at a loss for words at considering the incredible wonders of our salvation.  He says in vs31 “What then shall we say to these things?”  It’s as if he is exclaiming “What more can I say?” “How can I express the wonders of God’s love for us?”  And really, the wonders of our salvation should leave us speechless as well when we consider all that God has done for us.  Nothing that affects our salvation has been contingent upon what we might do for God but is founded upon what God has done for us. As Jonah 2:9 says, “salvation is from the Lord.”  Our salvation is all of God, God’s undeserved favor towards us. It was He who procured all these blessings for us.  

And since the Almighty God of heaven, the Holy Son of God Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirt have all cooperated and agreed together to bring many sons to glory, then we must conclude with Paul that “If God is for us, then who or what can be against us?”   We are more than conquerors through Jesus Christ over every thing that might come against us.  

Consider for a moment that question, “If God is for us.” The devil would love you to get you to a  point through trials and difficulties of life so that you might ask “Is God really for us?” It sometimes seems that everything is against us, and in such times we might doubt even that God is for us. But Paul wants us to know for sure that God is for us, and he offers us proof in vs32, that God did not spare His only Son for our sake, but gave Him up to die in our place.  “He who did not spare His own Son, but delivered Him over for us all, how will He not also with Him freely give us all things?”  

There can be no greater assurance of God’s concern for us, and watch care over us, than the fact that God gave Jesus, HIs only, beloved Son, to be the sacrificial lamb for us, that we might be given eternal life.   God did not spare Jesus, He did not mitigate the severity of the punishment for our sin to any degree, so that our judgment might be paid in full, so that He could adopt us as HIs children. 

We can be assured that God is for us by the one verse of scripture that probably every Christian should have memorized; John 3:16, “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believes in Him, should not perish, but have everlasting life.” Certainly we can be assured that God is for us, considering what God has done for us.

And if that is true, then we can learn from the greater to the lessor that God will freely give us all things.  Vs32 “He who did not spare His own Son, but delivered Him over for us all, how will He not also with Him freely give us all things?”  What things is he talking about? This is not a proof text for “name it and claim it”.  Does he mean any thing we desire?  I would have to say that is not my experience.  I have asked for many things in my life as a Christian and God has chosen not to give them to me. And maybe it was better that I did not get everything I wanted or asked for.  

But what I think Paul is talking about are the things mentioned so far in this text which I highlighted while ago. All the blessings and benefits of my salvation are guaranteed.  He will not withhold them, but He richly pours out His grace upon me.  As the song “Great is Thy Faithfulness” says, “all I have needed thy hand has provided, great is thy faithfulness, Lord unto me.” So since God is for us,  who can be against us?

Paul rephrases that question who can be against us, by saying “who will bring a charge against God’s elect? It is God who justifies. Who is he that condemns? It is Christ Jesus who died,  yes, rather who was raised, who is at the right hand of God, who also intercedes for us.” Perhaps the entity that Paul is referencing who is against us is none other than the enemy, which is Satan. Satan is called the accuser in Revelation 12:10 “Then I heard a loud voice in heaven, saying, ‘Now the salvation, and the power, and the kingdom of our God and the authority of His Christ have come, for the accuser of our brethren has been thrown down, he who accuses them before our God day and night. And they overcame him because of the blood of the Lamb and because of the word of their testimony, and they did not love their life even when faced with death.”  You will remember that Satan accused Job, God’s servant.  

But the answer that is given against any accusation against us that Satan might make is that it is God who justifies. We are justified by faith is what God has done.  How did God justify us?  By condemning His own Son, putting the penalty for our sin upon Jesus, that we might go free. Isaiah speaks of the reason God justified us in Isaiah 53:10-11 “But the LORD was pleased To crush Him, putting [Him] to grief; If He would render Himself [as] a guilt offering, He will see His offspring, He will prolong His days, And the good pleasure of the LORD will prosper in His hand.  As a result of the anguish of His soul, He will see it and be satisfied; By His knowledge the Righteous One, My Servant, will justify the many, As He will bear their iniquities.”  God justified us on the basis of what Christ did for us on the cross.  And the accuser cannot ask God to engage in double jeopardy. Any accusations in the light of our justification have no validity. We have already been assured in vs 1 that there is no condemnation to those who are in Christ.  Now we are reminded in vs 34 that there can be no condemnation because Jesus was condemned in our place.

And as vs 34 tells us, Christ is now at the right hand of God, interceding for us.  It’s as if God is the judge, Satan is the prosecutor, and Jesus Christ is the Intercessor, our defense attorney.   And by virtue of HIs intercession we have no fear of condemnation from the accuser.

Jesus said during HIs ministry on earth that no greater love has any man than this, than a man lays down his life for his friends.  Jesus Christ willingly laid down His life for us, that we might be His friends, and even more than friends, His family.  That we might be adopted into the family of God. He loved us enough to leave the glory of heaven, to leave HIs place at the right hand of God, in order to humble Himself to become a man, that He might die for His enemies and procure their salvation.  And Paul emphasizes our assurance is secure because of the love of Christ.

Earlier Paul asked, “if God is for us?”  And I said that Satan often attacks us in hope that we will think that God is not for us.  That He does not care about our circumstances.  But we have seen many assurances that God does care.  However, another attack of the devil on those who are afflicted is often to make them think that God does not love us. Satan suggests that if God loved us, He would never let us go through what we are going through here on earth.

So Paul asks that question in vs 35. “Who will separate us from the love of Christ? Will tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?”  Listen, our love for God may waver, but Christ’s love for us will never fail.  Nothing can separate us from the love of Christ.

Paul gives us in this verse seven circumstances that the devil might use to try to convince us that God doesn’t love us. The first is affliction. Some commentators have said that affliction speaks of outward affliction and distress speaks of inward distress. I think of Job who was afflicted with boils.  Affliction is often physical, it may be an illness.  It’s on the outside, or comes from the outside.  But the second circumstance Paul mentions is distress.  Distress speaks of a inward condition.  It’s an inward distress of the mind or soul.  It’s being torn apart on the inside with fear or worry.

The third means of causing us to doubt God’s love is persecution.  Persecution can come from many sources, in many different forms, but it is a deliberate attack on your faith.  Famine is the fourth, and that may be hunger, but it may include any lack of necessities. I will tell you that God does not always supply all our needs immediately.  God sometimes allows us to suffer famine, long beyond when we think God should have answered.  And your faith will be tested in times of famine, to see if you will still trust the Lord when He seemingly does not supply what He has promised.

Nakedness refers to a lack of clothing.  Not necessarily actually naked, but in need of clothing. Clothing is a basic, fundamental need, and the lack of it is something that Satan would test us through. 

Peril is danger.  As a Christian we can sometimes experience danger.  In the hymn “Amazing Grace” it has the line, “through many dangers, toils and snares, I have already come, but grace has brought me safe thus far, and grace will lead me home.” Paul spoke of his own experience with danger in 2 Cor. 11 saying he had often been “in danger from rivers, danger from robbers, danger from my own people, danger from Gentiles, danger in the city, danger in the wilderness, danger at sea, danger from false brothers.”

And the final circumstance that might be faced is the sword.  The sword refers to death, perhaps by execution.  It should be noted that every one of those trials were something that the apostle Paul had personally experienced up to that point, except the sword.  Paul writes in 2 Cor. 11:23 about all the hardships and difficulties that he had experienced as an apostle.  He had been stoned, whipped, shipwrecked, stranded at sea, hungry, thirsty, in poverty, etc, all during his ministry.  It must be understood that we too are going to experience such things from time to time.  The only thing Paul had not experienced at the time of this writing was the sword.  But within a few years, he would succumb to that as well, and lose his head at the hand of the Emperor Nero.

Thus Paul could agree with the Psalmist in quoting Psalm 44:22, “FOR YOUR SAKE WE ARE BEING PUT TO DEATH ALL DAY LONG; WE WERE CONSIDERED AS SHEEP TO BE SLAUGHTERED.”  The reality of suffering in our Christian faith  goes against our contemporary theology a lot of times.  We somehow think that our Christianity is supposed to insulate us from suffering and sickness and death.  But in fact, Paul indicates that suffering is a very present reality.  

Jesus Himself promised suffering for His followers.  He said the servant is not above his master.  If they hated Him, they will hate us as well.  He said in John 16:33 “These things I have spoken to you, so that in Me you may have peace. In the world you have tribulation, but take courage; I have overcome the world.”

So even though we will experience tribulation, any or all of those seven circumstances Paul listed, as Christ has overcome, so we will overcome.  Paul says in vs 37, “But in all these things we overwhelmingly conquer through Him who loved us.” We overwhelmingly conquer in spite of all these tribulations.  In the midst of these tribulations, in fact, even by means of these tribulations, we are more than conquerors. 

Remember back in vs 28 Paul talked about all things working together for good.  And we said that the things he was talking about was various types of suffering.  He was using suffering to conform us to the image of Christ.  And now Paul says that in all these things we are more than conquerors through Him who loved us.  They cannot hurt us, but even can be used to help us. They all work together for good.

He goes on to enumerate those things in vs 38, as the symphony builds to it’s grand finale; “For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers,  nor height, nor depth, nor any other created thing, will be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

Not even the greatest enemy, our physical death can defeat us, because we have been given eternal life. It can’t defeat us because He lives, and because He lives, we live and will ever live with Him. And life itself cannot defeat us, even with all it’s distractions, and worries and cares.  Life cannot separate us from God, because our life is given by God.  He holds our life in HIs hand.  By Him we live and breath and exist. Whether we live or die, we are the Lord’s. 

No angel or principality, whether a fallen or holy angel, as powerful as they may be, can separate us from the love of God. Speaking of the fallen angels, 1 John 4:4 says “greater is He that is in us than he that is in the world.  God loves us more than the angels.  When angels fell in sin, God did not send Jesus to die for them but held them in eternal condemnation.  But God so loved us, that even when we were sinners Christ died for us.

Neither can things present or things to come  separate us from the plan and love of God. I look at all that is going on in our country today, all that is going on in the world, and I am almost overwhelmed. The future seems almost hopeless. But God is not overwhelmed.  All things are going according to His plan.  And His plan includes me.  He plan is for me.  He has chosen me to be a child of God and to share His kingdom with Him forever.  He has promised good to me. And nothing that happens in this world can change HIs love for me.

Nor, says Paul, can any powers hurt me.  No power of government can separate me.  Government may take away my rights, they may take away my citizenship, they may lock me up in prison, but they can’t take away God’s love for me. Neither can height nor depth.  I think of that every time I fly in an airplane.  I am just as safe and just as loved by God at 30,000 feet in the air as I am on solid ground. Jesus said, I will never leave you nor forsake you.  He has promised to be with me in all things, no matter where I might go or how far.  

Psalm 139 says, “Where can I go from Your Spirit? Or where can I flee from Your presence?  If I ascend to heaven, You are there; If I make my bed in Sheol, behold, You are there.  If I take the wings of the dawn, If I dwell in the remotest part of the sea,  Even there Your hand will lead me, And Your right hand will lay hold of me.  If I say, “Surely the darkness will overwhelm me, And the light around me will be night,” Even the darkness is not dark to You, And the night is as bright as the day. Darkness and light are alike [to You.]  For You formed my inward parts; You wove me in my mother’s womb. I will give thanks to You, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made; Wonderful are Your works, And my soul knows it very well.  My frame was not hidden from You, When I was made in secret, [And] skillfully wrought in the depths of the earth;  Your eyes have seen my unformed substance; And in Your book were all written The days that were ordained [for me,] When as yet there was not one of them.  How precious also are Your thoughts to me, O God! How vast is the sum of them!  If I should count them, they would outnumber the sand. When I awake, I am still with You.”

And back in Romans 8,  just in case Paul left anything out, he adds, “nor any other created thing, will be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”  Nothing, absolutely nothing whatsoever, can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus.

We that on Jesus have trusted and believed, God has secured for us a salvation that is beyond description and comprehension, that surpasses the tribulations and trials of this world, and in fact makes us more than conquerors in Christ.  As Christ triumphed over death and the grave, so we will triumph over death and the grave.  As He ascended into heaven, so we will ascend to heaven.  As He sits on a throne in heaven, so we shall sit on thrones in heaven.  As He lives forever more, so we shall live forever more with Him.  This is our inheritance. It is our future glorification, which is already in progress, so that we are already considered as seated in the heavenly places according to Ephesians 1:20.  Our name card is already reserving our place at the table, and God is preparing a place for us there with Him.  

I pray that you have these assurances of your salvation today.  If you do not have this assurance of your salvation, I hope that you will trust in Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, that you may have the forgiveness of sins, the righteousness of Jesus Christ, and be filled with the presence of His Holy Spirit.  Christ has made all these things possible through His death, burial and resurrection.  Believe in Him and be saved and receive the adoption as a child of God, and enter into the inheritance which God has prepared for those who love Him.  It is a free gift of God.  He loves you enough to die for you.  I hope that you will trust in Him and believe in Him as your Savior today that you might have life.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, worship on the beach |

Shaped by Suffering, Romans 8:28-31

Jun

7

2020

thebeachfellowship

Among Christians, verse 28 is probably one of the best known, most often quoted verses in the Bible.  But as is often the fact in such cases, it is probably misinterpreted more than it is understood correctly.  And so today I want to focus just on this verse and the two immediately following it, in hope that we can gain a correct understanding of this passage.  Because it is a tremendously important text.  It states a doctrine that undergirds our faith.  And so it’s important that we understand it.  

Correct doctrine is important.  These truths of God’s word are what we base our faith upon.  We base our future eternity upon them as well.  And nothing could be more tragic than to assume a false doctrine is true, and pattern your life in accordance with that doctrine, only to find out eventually that it is a flawed doctrine.  That you thought it meant certain things, but in reality it did not.  And usually when you discover that, it comes at the worst possible time.

I will give you a personal example. I grew up in the church.  I was a pastor’s kid and I must have listened to thousands of sermons and teachings about the Bible growing up.  But in spite fo that, I had a superficial knowledge of the Bible. I had never proved some of those doctrines in the fire of trials, and it turns out, that some of the things I thought were true were not.  

About a dozen years after I was married, I had by that time a successful career, I had a nice home, a beautiful family, kids in private schools, and all the trappings of what I thought were the benefits of living as a Christian in America. And then began a series of illnesses that were not quickly diagnosed.  I was ill with one thing after another for about a year or so.  And I soon found myself unable to work as I used to be able to do.  My finances went upside down. I ended up in serious debt looking at the possibility of bankruptcy. 

I’ll spare you all the details, but suffice it to say that my faith began to take on a more serious note.  Nothing sends you to church and to your Bible like a crisis.  But somehow through the years I had developed a type of faith that had been influenced by what is often called the prosperity gospel.  I wouldn’t have called it that, but nevertheless I expected that God would make everything better soon.  If I had more faith, if I tithed more, if I went to church more, if I read my Bible more, God would soon rectify everything and all would return to normal, perhaps even better than normal.  

I found examples in the Bible which supported that kind of hope; such as Joseph who was cast in prison and then was exalted to the second position under Pharaoh. I found every reference in the Bible to God making everything right, or restoration, that I could find, such as with the life of Job, and I underlined every one. And particularly I found Romans 8:28 comforting as I believed it promised that God would make everything good again. I held onto that faith with all my strength, believing that the size of my faith, or the diligence of my faith would make God come to my rescue and fix all my problems.  After all, it only made sense that God could use me even more if I was successful and healthy than if I was a physical and financial wreck.  How could I be useful to the Lord as a failure?

Well, long story short, I eventually was forced to sell the dream home that I had built with my own two hands.  My health degenerated and left me practically incapacitated for over three years.  I developed paralyzing anxiety attacks that made me a psychological wreck.  To this day I have large sections of my memory which seem to be blacked out, particularly of my children at that time. I guess from stress.  I can’t remember some things.  I lost my new cars.  I ended up at the bottom financially and finally at the end of my rope we moved here to the beach to try to reconstruct my life, a  move which didn’t really improve my situation at all, in fact it may have made it worse.

Bottom line is, I found that a lot of the doctrines of my faith that I had wanted to be true, or which I believed to be true, were in fact not what the Bible teaches.  My faith became tested in the fire of adversity and what came out was quite a bit different than what I had wanted to believe.  I found that believing something does not make it true, and God is not obligated to fulfill my wishes just because I muster up some sort of fervent faith.  

And so I present this passage of scripture to you today not from the perspective of a theologian sitting in an ivory tower, but from the experience of someone who has proven the validity of these promises in the fires of tribulation and trials.  So let me just say unapologetically right from the outset that verse 28 is not some sort of promise that God is going to make everything work out the way you want it to.  God is not promising good to you in the sense that we most often think of what’s good.  When you lose a loved one to illness or an accident, perhaps a young person in the prime of their life, you will ask yourself then, “how can this be good?”  And if you’re like most of us, trying to understand life from our own perspective of justice and goodness and rightness, then we will end up disillusioned and in danger of your faith becoming shipwrecked.

The key then to understanding this verse is the context in which it is found.  Context is so essential in interpreting scripture correctly.  And the verse which summarizes the context up to this point best is vs 16 and 17. “The Spirit Himself testifies with our spirit that we are children of God,  and if children, heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with [Him] so that we may also be glorified with [Him.]”  What Paul is saying here is that if we have become children of God by the new birth of the Holy Spirit, then we have a glorious inheritance that awaits us in eternity, but the path to glory goes through the valley of suffering in the present world.

Now we have already discussed this verse in previous studies, so I don’t want to belabor it again, but suffice it to say that what Paul is saying there is that suffering is an integral part of the Christian experience.  Health, wealth and prosperity is not typically the means that God chooses, but suffering is the way that God uses to bring His children to glory. It is the means that God uses to change us, to conform us to be like Christ in this present world.

I’m afraid that this principle is not something that gets a lot of airtime on Christian radio and television.  The expectation of Christian suffering doesn’t sell a lot of books.  We all want three steps to some sort of mountain top experience.  Or we want seven steps to a better, more fulfilling life as a Christian. And of course that usually includes all the physical and material “blessings” which we think will help us live out the American dream.

That may be the American dream, but it is not the Christian experience which the Bible teaches.  Let me just show you a few verses of scripture which indicate that suffering is the means which God has ordained for the Christian.  To the church at Philippi Paul said in Phil. 1:29 “For to you it has been granted for Christ’s sake, not only to believe in Him, but also to suffer for His sake.”  To Timothy in 2Tim. 2:3 “Suffer hardship with [me,] as a good soldier of Christ Jesus.”  Peter in 1Peter 4:19 said “Therefore, those also who suffer according to the will of God shall entrust their souls to a faithful Creator in doing what is right.” Jesus said to the church at Smyrna in Rev 2:10 ‘Do not fear what you are about to suffer. Behold, the devil is about to cast some of you into prison, so that you will be tested, and you will have tribulation for ten days. Be faithful until death, and I will give you the crown of life.”  1Peter 5:8-10 Peter says “Be of sober [spirit,] be on the alert. Your adversary, the devil, prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour.  But resist him, firm in [your] faith, knowing that the same experiences of suffering are being accomplished by your brethren who are in the world.  After you have suffered for a little while, the God of all grace, who called you to His eternal glory in Christ, will Himself perfect, confirm, strengthen [and] establish you.”  In John 16:33 Jesus said,  “These things I have spoken to you, so that in Me you may have peace. In the world you have tribulation, but take courage; I have overcome the world.”  

And we could go on and on.  Contrary to our expectations, the Beatitudes talk about suffering being a blessing of the child of God. Jesus talked about taking up your cross and following Him. We don’t have the time to exhaust all that the scripture says about that subject this morning.  But it’s important to understand that suffering is not incidental to the Christian life, but it’s essential.  And furthermore, suffering has a purpose, a Divine purpose.  

So in the context of the suffering that we will endure as children of God, Paul says in vs 28, “And we know that God causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to [His] purpose.”  God causes all things, even what we might think are bad things, He uses our suffering to work together for good for those who love God, who are called according to His purpose.  God uses our suffering for good. Now that is a hard doctrine, but that’s a true doctrine.  A fundamental doctrine.  

Probably the best illustration I can think of for that principle is that of Joseph, who was betrayed by his brothers, sold into slavery, spent 13 years in prison for something he was not guilty of, only to eventually be released and put second in command under Pharaoh.  But what’s important to see in that was how Joseph responded many years later when his brother’s finally came and bowed down to him as he had dreamed they would when he was but a boy.  They were afraid that he would put them to death for what they had done to him.  But what did he say to them?  “You meant it for evil, but God used it for good.”

Notice that please.  It was evil that they did to Joseph.  He suffered tremendously for many  years. He was sold into slavery because of their hatred and he suffered greatly. But what purpose did God achieve in Joseph through that suffering? God used Joseph’s suffering for good. He made Joseph like Christ.  Joseph became the means of salvation for his people.  He became a type of Christ.  He was able to love his enemies like Christ loves.  He was able to forgive his enemies like Christ forgives.

So what Paul calls “good” is not necessarily the kinds of things we might call good, depending on the circumstances we find ourselves in.  What he calls good must be examined in light of the fact that the Christian loves God.  Notice that is how Paul phrases this; “God works all things together for good to those who love God.” Now we talk in the church all the time about love, especially Christian love.  We just finished studying what is called the great love chapter in 1 Cor. 13 in our Wednesday night Bible study.  And so we know that this is not an emotion base or sentimental love Paul is talking about.  The love which God has for us, and which we are to have for Him, is a sacrificial love.  It’s a selfless love.  It’s a love which wants what is best for the other, not what is best for us.  It is a love for God that is born out of the fact that God first loved us, so we love Him.  And this is love, that Christ suffered and  died to save sinners.  Oh, that kind of love then.  The kind of love we are talking about is a love that lays down his life for his friends.  That suffers all things, bears all things, endures all things, for the sake of the One whom we love.  To that person who loves God as He loves us, God causes all things to work together for good, even our suffering.

Then to  even further delineating this providence of God, Paul gives the caveat that those who love God are also called according to His purpose. So it’s not my purposes, my grand design, my 25 year plan that God is obligated to fix everything so it works out nice and tidy and I get what I want, so that I can rub my hands together and say “boy, life is good!”  But if I am called according to His purpose, if I am enjoined with God’s purposes, if I love God so much that I am willing to sacrifice whatever is necessary to do His will, then God will cause all things to work together for good, to accomplish His purpose.

Ok then, the next logical question is what is God’s purpose?  I believe the question has already been answered to some degree by the illustration of Joseph.  But nevertheless, Paul makes it clear in the next paragraph. Look at vs29, “For those whom He foreknew, He also predestined [to become] conformed to the image of His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brethren.” 

Now right about here, most theologians and a lot of preachers stop preaching, and start talking about theology.  And theology is necessary and it has it’s place.  But it’s possible to spend an hour or two on a dissertation of Calvinism  and completely miss the point of what Paul is saying here.  What I find discomfiting sometimes in discussions of theology is that we spend an inordinate amount of time trying to define what God can and can’t do, as opposed to figuring out what God wants us to do.  We spend a lot of time trying to define the undefinable, to know the unknowable.  To explain where the beginning and end are in eternity. 

But my take on a lot of high minded theology is to simply say that if God said it, then I believe it.  I don’t have to understand it.  Predestination and foreknowledge and election are things that my finite mind cannot comprehend.  And so talking about what I think God can and cannot do is not very productive. If you can understand eternity, then maybe you can figure out election and predestination. But God doesn’t use a lot of pen and ink trying to explain such things.  He just declares them.  But He does spend a lot of time explaining what He requires of us.  And so I think we would be better served to focus our time and energy on what He requires of us, and let God take care of being God.

That being said, however, we can clearly take away something important inn what Paul says here.  And that is that God has a plan. God has a purpose.  We may not understand exactly how foreknowledge and predestination work, but anyone can understand that you have to have a plan and a purpose for there to be foreknowledge and predestination. How can you predestine something unless you first plan what it is you want to accomplish?  So God has a plan and a purpose from eternity past.  And that plan and purpose is to bring many sons to glory.  

Hebrews 2:10 says, “For it was fitting for Him, for whom are all things and by whom are all things, in bringing many sons to glory, to make the captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings.” That’s exactly what Paul is indicating here in vs 29. “For those whom He foreknew, He also predestined  (that means God planned, He predetermined) for many people to become conformed to the image of His Son, so that Christ would be the firstborn among many brethren.”  Notice the last part of that statement, so that Christ would be the firstborn among MANY brethren.” Same thought as in Hebrews; Christ bringing many sons to glory.  God’s purpose in sending His Son to the world is to bring many other children to Him.

And to make them sons, or children, that are similar to Christ is the purpose of God.  Paul has already established earlier the benefits of being adopted into the family of God.  That we are heirs of God, and co-heirs with Christ. Now he makes the point that the purpose of God is just not to save them from hell, but to make them like Christ.  Notice how he says this; “He also predestined to become conformed to the image of His Son.”  That is God’s purpose, to bring them into conformity to the image of Christ.  To make them look like Christ, to act like Christ, to have the righteousness of Christ, to have the Spirit of Christ, to do the works of Christ.  That’s what it means to be in conformity to the image of Christ.  Paul is talking about our sanctification. 

Sanctification is the process of being remade in the image of Christ.  Now that happens in the chain of salvation.  And Paul states that chain of events which results in our salvation.  Remember as  I have told you before that salvation has three parts; justification, sanctification, and glorification.  Justification occurs when we accept Jesus as our Savior, believing in what He did on the cross on our behalf, and as a result of our faith in Him God forgives us of our sins, and transfers the righteousness of Christ to us. At that point we are declared righteous, and we are indwelled by the Holy Spirit.

So having become what Jesus called “born again”, He begins the process of sanctification in us.  This is the life of a Christian.  It’s the process of being conformed to the image of Jesus Christ in this present body, in this present life.  And as Paul has just indicated, God uses suffering to shape us into Christ’s image. Suffering is one of the tools that God uses to chip away the dross, to chip away the weights and the sin which so easily besets us, and to shape us into a work of art, really a work of love, in which we begin to take on the characteristics of Christ as we deny the flesh and walk in the Spirit. Suffering is the means of our sanctification.

Now that process of sanctification lasts until the last phase of our salvation, which is when we are gathered to be with the Lord.  That last phase of our salvation is glorification, in which this body of flesh will be made incorruptible.  We will be changed physically to be like Him for we shall see Him as He is.  We will receive a glorified body that will not have the sin nature any longer.  A body that will never die.  It will never have disease.  Because it will have no sin. And in that phase we will ever be with the Lord.  In that glorification phase we will inherit what God has prepared for those who love Him.  In that stage, the eternal plan of God to bring many sons to glory will be realized finally and completely.  The plan of God, which cannot fail, which was predetermined before the world began, will be brought to it’s consummation in the Kingdom of God.  And as Paul indicated earlier, heaven and earth will be remade to be the Paradise of God, where we that love God will be able to be with Him and live with Him, and love and serve Him forever.

So that is the good that God causes to work together for our sakes, to bring many sons to glory.  To conform many sons and daughters to the image of Jesus Christ.  That many sons and daughters will share in the inheritance of Christ.  That brings us back to the verse we started with, vs 17, 17 “and if [we are] children, heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with Him so that we may also be glorified with Him.”

Oh Christian, if you hear me today, do not be dismayed at the fiery trials which have come upon you, which come upon you for your testing, as if some strange thing were happening to you, “but to the degree that you share the sufferings of Christ, keep on rejoicing, so that also at the revelation of His glory you may rejoice with exultation.”  

John Cowper wrote a hymn of which the following verse is famous.  He said, “Judge not the Lord by feeble sense, but trust him for his grace; behind a frowning providence, he hides a smiling face.”  Let us trust God in the suffering, in the trials and in the storms.  He has a purpose and a plan to call many sons to glory through suffering with Christ and being conformed to the image of Christ.  And He has promised to make sure that the chain of salvation is completed in us.  He will not lose even one of His sheep.  

Perhaps there is someone here today that has heard the call of God upon their heart.  Today if you hear the voice of God calling you, do not harden your heart.  Call upon the Lord when He may be found.  If you confess your sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and cleanse you from all unrighteousness. He will adopt you into His family so that you will receive the inheritance of glory.  If God is calling you today I hope and pray that you will answer Him, that you may become a child of God.  

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, worship on the beach |

Three groanings, Romans 8:18-27

May

31

2020

thebeachfellowship

Last week we looked at the blessings and benefits of what Paul described in vs 15 as adopted into the family of God, as a child of God. I would remind you that adoption as children of God is not a natural condition. Contrary to popular opinion, we are not naturally children of God, but Jesus said we were naturally children of our father the devil. Consequently we are all sinners and under the condemnation of death by natural birth. But for those who have believed in Jesus Christ as their Savior and Lord, who have trusted in His substitutionary atonement on their behalf by His death and resurrection, then they are born again spiritually, and at that point they are adopted into the family of God.

Now last week we looked at some of the blessings that are promised to the children of God. Not the least of which Paul states that we are now heirs of God. He says in vs17 that we are heirs. “Now if we are children, then we are heirs — heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ, if indeed we share in his sufferings in order that we may also share in His glory.” Just think, we are co heirs with Christ. We will share in the glory that is going to be given to Christ. That’s an incredible, incomprehensible blessing that is part of our inheritance as the children of God.

Now verse 17 connects two things that we would normally never put together: sufferings and glory, or what someone has called the hurts and hallelujahs. And you will find that these two things they are almost always connected in the scripture.There is a popular false doctrine that is being taught in some churches today that claim hardship or suffering or illness or lack of anything you desire is contrary to the gospel. But if you read this passage you must conclude that that doctrine is in error. The road of Christianity is one of suffering and glory. But the cross comes before the glory.

Suffering and glory belong together, and you find them together in almost every passage of Scripture that deals with the suffering of the Christian. For instance, the Apostle Paul links them together in 2 Corinthians 4:17 saying: “For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all.”

John seems to reference that two dimensional experience of a Christian in 1John 3:2 saying, “Beloved, now we are children of God, and it has not appeared as yet what we will be. We know that when He appears, we will be like Him, because we will see Him just as He is.” Again we see these presumably two opposing dimensions of our Christian life connected. There is a present condition that is typified by suffering, and a future dimension in which we will be like Christ in glory. And so in this passage we are looking at today, we see these two dimensions detailed in three arenas; in the arena of the creation, or nature, in the human arena, as in our personal experience as the children of God, and then even in the spiritual arena, as the Holy Spirit suffers with us.

Paul is speaking here of the present sufferings of the children of God, and their future glorification. And I would add that suffering can take many forms. It may involve persecution, though I would say we haven’t seen a lot of that in this country. However, I think we are heading in that direction. But it can also take the form of family reproach. It can come from situations in your career or job as a Christian. It can take the form of isolation, loneliness, as it becomes difficult to have friends or loved ones because of your Christian convictions. Jesus said the world hated Me, so don’t be surprised if it hates you. There are many ways you can suffer as a Christian.

However, the Bible teaches that suffering is used by God for a good purpose. That’s what vs 28 is talking about. Vs 28 “And we know that God causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to [His] purpose.” Paul issn’t saying that everything in life is going to work out fine. Don’t worry, be happy. But he is saying that God will use everything, even suffering, for His purposes, and His purposes are good. Suffering is used to purify His people, to sanctify us, to shape us into the image of Jesus Christ as we share in His sufferings.

So, our sufferings as believers – physical, emotional, whatever they may be – are directly linked with the glory that is coming. The important thing we need to see is that both the sufferings and the glory are privileges that are given to us. It is easy for Christians reading these passages to get the idea that we earn our glory by the sufferings that we go through. But as this passage makes clear, glory is as part of our inheritance in Christ. And suffering, also, is our inheritance in Christ. Suffering is a privilege committed to us. Paul says this again very plainly in Philippians 1:29: “For it has been granted to you on behalf of Christ not only to believe on him, but also to suffer for his sake.”

In the early church, it is recorded in Acts that those Christians actually rejoiced in their sufferings. Peter and John, Paul and Silas and many others rejoiced because they were counted worthy to suffer for the sake of the Lord. And though they may have been beaten and mistreated, they went away rejoicing because God had counted them worthy to bear suffering for his name’s sake. That kind of perspective is what makes it possible for us to endure suffering and, more than that, to actually rise above it with rejoicing. James 1:2 says, “Consider it all joy, my brethren, when you encounter various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces endurance. And let endurance have [its] perfect result, so that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.” We can only consider suffering joy it as a privilege to share in Christ’s sufferings, and a means by which He makes us like Christ.

The blows by the hammer on the steel may be hard, and the fire may be intense, but what is produced on the anvil will be a weapon that will be fit for service to God.

Jesus promised a blessing in Matthew 5:11-12 for those that suffer. He said, “Blessed are you when men persecute you and say all manner of evil against you falsely for his name’s sake. Rejoice and be exceeding glad, for great is your reward in heaven: for so persecuted they the prophets who were before you.”

So the theme of this passage is found in vs 18; “I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us.” The theme is that incomparable glory lies after a time of suffering – glory beyond description, greater than anything you can compare it with on earth. A glory that will make the present suffering seem but a drop in the bucket of what God has planned for us. We have a tremendous inheritance that awaits us as the children of God after we go through a temporary time of suffering here on earth.

So the apostle says, “Our sufferings are not worthy to be even mentioned in comparison with the glory that is to follow.” Now, that statement could just be written off as hyperbole if it didn’t come from a man like Paul. He was a man who suffered immensely. I’m sure that no one listening today has gone through even a fraction of the suffering that Paul endured.

Paul listed some of his sufferings in 2Co 11:23-28 saying to some who had criticized him, “Are they servants of Christ?–I speak as if insane–I more so; in far more labors, in far more imprisonments, beaten times without number, often in danger of death. Five times I received from the Jews thirty-nine [lashes.] Three times I was beaten with rods, once I was stoned, three times I was shipwrecked, a night and a day I have spent in the deep. [I have been] on frequent journeys, in dangers from rivers, dangers from robbers, dangers from [my] countrymen, dangers from the Gentiles, dangers in the city, dangers in the wilderness, dangers on the sea, dangers among false brethren; [I have been] in labor and hardship, through many sleepless nights, in hunger and thirst, often without food, in cold and exposure. Apart from [such] external things, there is the daily pressure on me [of] concern for all the churches.”

Even though Paul suffered tremendously, yet he still asserts that the suffering we experience is not even a drop in the bucket compared with the immensity of glory that is coming. This is the incredible glory that God has prepared for those who love him.

We can endure the suffering, and even triumph in it, because we see the glory that is to follow. But the future glory is preceded by three types of suffering, which Paul describes as characterized by groaning. So there are three groanings that he makes mention of in the remainder of this passage, which are but precursors of the glory which is to follow.

The first groaning is that from nature. Paul says that creation is suffering while waiting for the glory that is coming. Verse 19 tells us that nature is waiting for something: “For the anxious longing of the creation waits eagerly for the revealing of the sons of God.” The word in the Greek language which is translated “anxious longing” is an interesting word. It is a word that pictures a man standing and looking for something to happen, craning his head forward.

Paul goes on to say that the creation was subjected to futility, or frustration. “For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly (not by original design), but because of Him who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself also will be set free from its slavery to corruption into the freedom of the glory of the children of God.”

Paul is saying that creation not only is waiting for something, but that it is doing so because it is linked with man. Creation fell when man fell. Not only did our whole race fall into the bondage of sin and death, as the earlier chapters of Romans explain, but the earth fell as well. God said in Genesis 3; “Cursed is the ground because of you; In toil you will eat of it all the days of your life. Both thorns and thistles it shall grow for you; and you will eat the plants of the field; by the sweat of your face. You will eat bread, till you return to the ground, because from it you were taken; for you are dust, and to dust you shall return.”

It was man’s sin that caused thorns and bramble to overrun nature. It was man’s sin that made the animals to fear and devour one other. With the fall of man came the curse of death upon the earth. And so the earth was subject to futility. It no longer is what it was intended to be; a paradise which was made for man to enjoy.

But Paul argues that it is also true that when the Christian is delivered from the corruption, nature will be delivered as well. Therefore, when the time comes when the sons of God are going to be revealed – when it shall appear what shall be, as 1 John 3:2 says, when what we have become in our spirits, sons of the living God, shall become evident – in that day, nature will be freed from its bondage as well and reborn as the Paradise of God.

That is the time on earth spoken of in Isaiah 11:6-9 “And the wolf will dwell with the lamb, And the leopard will lie down with the young goat, And the calf and the young lion and the fatling together; And a little boy will lead them. Also the cow and the bear will graze, Their young will lie down together, And the lion will eat straw like the ox. The nursing child will play by the hole of the cobra, And the weaned child will put his hand on the viper’s den. They will not hurt or destroy in all My holy mountain, For the earth will be full of the knowledge of the LORD As the waters cover the sea.” That is the renewal that creation looks forward to.

But for now, under the weight of the curse, yet in anticipation of that day, the apostle says, nature groans, but it groans in hope (Verse 22): ”For we know that the whole creation groans and suffers the pains of childbirth together until now.” As Paul said earlier, nature groans in the hope that the creation itself will be liberated from its bondage of decay and brought into the glorious freedom of the children of God. It groans under the suffering of sin that has kept it in bondage to futility. And so Paul likens the suffering of creation as to the groans of a woman in labor, as she bears with the suffering, because she has a hope that something much better will be produced through her present labor and hardship.

A point that should be emphasized perhaps is that this teaches us that nature is made for man. It was to be his domain, under his rule. And when man fell, his domain fell under a similar judgment. God cursed the ground because of man’s sin. So in like respect, when man is regenerated in glory, then nature will be regenerated into glory as well. Peter speaks of the fact that heavens and earth will be burned with a fervent heat, but we look forward to a new heaven and new earth. The end of the earth as we know it will not be by flood, but by fire. A purifying fire from which the earth will produce a new vegetation, a new animal life, in which there is no decay, no effects of sin, which will be compatible to the new glory which man will also enjoy.

The second groaning that Paul describes is that of the children of God in their present condition. Vs23 “And not only this, but also we ourselves, having the first fruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting eagerly for [our] adoption as sons, the redemption of our body. For in hope we have been saved, but hope that is seen is not hope; for who hopes for what he [already] sees? But if we hope for what we do not see, with perseverance we wait eagerly for it.”

Paul says here that though we ourselves are redeemed in spirit, our bodies are not yet redeemed; and so being in the corrupt flesh, we, too, are groaning. He said as much about his own experience in chapter 7 concluding “O wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?” It was as if Paul is groaning in his spirit because of this great conflict within him between what he wants to do to please God, and what his flesh is found to be doing in spite of his best intentions. Because of his justification he has the first fruits of the Spirit. He is seeing some evidence in terms of the fruit of righteousness because of the inward dwelling of the Holy Spirit. But he is frustrated by the lack of perfection that he wants to achieve. And so he groans in his spirit in suffering under the burden of the flesh, and yet anticipating the future glory of the body at the consummation.

All through this passage there is a constant contrast between the groan and the glory; yet there is a link between the two. Nature groans; we groan. And yet the groaning, or suffering, is producing the glory. I remind you again of what Paul said in Second Corinthians 4:17: “For momentary, light affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison.” Suffering is preparing us by sanctifying us, conforming us into the image of Jesus Christ by sufferings.

PhIl. 3:10-11 says, “that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to His death; in order that I may attain to the resurrection from the dead.” Our sufferings, our groaning, is producing in us a future glorification as we are being made like Christ spiritually, and will one day be like Him in body as well.

But in the meantime we groan because the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak. We groan because of the havoc that sin makes in our lives, and in the lives of those we love. We groan because we see opportunities that are not being taken advantage of. We groan because we waste the gifts of the Holy Spirit. The Bible tells us that, as Jesus drew near the tomb of Lazarus, He groaned in His Spirit because he was so burdened by the ravages that sin had made in the lives of those He loved. He groaned, even though he knew that he would soon raise Lazarus from the dead. So we groan in our spirits — we groan in disappointment, in bereavement, in sorrow. We groan physically in our pain and our limitation. Life consists of a great deal of groaning. But the apostle immediately adds that this is a groaning which has hope.

The Christian perspective is that, though the body is in pain and suffering and disappointment now, this is an important tool that God uses in our lives. It is something that is part of the purposes and plan of God, part of the privilege committed to us as Christians. We suffer with Christ that we might be like Christ. As he suffered, so do we, that we might also be glorified, even as He is. As vs 17 said, “if indeed we suffer with Him so that we may also be glorified with Him.” That is our hope that makes the suffering bearable. We have a hope that is not now realized, it is in the future, but it is nevertheless a sure hope. A hope which the author of Hebrews calls the anchor of the soul. And so again, we are taught that our hope of a life of pleasant living, of everything working out, a life of health, wealth and prosperity is not God’s plan for the life of a Christian. But there will be trials, there will be suffering, their will be groaning, and yet there is a firm conviction which we call the blessed hope, which will make it all worth it all when we see Jesus.

Then there is the final groaning which is found in vs26, “In the same way the Spirit also helps our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as we should, but the Spirit Himself intercedes for [us] with groanings too deep for words; and He who searches the hearts knows what the mind of the Spirit is, because He intercedes for the saints according to [the will of] God.”

Paul says the Spirit is groaning. The Spirit is groaning with words which cannot be uttered. This passage helps us in our understanding of prayer. The apostle says that we do not know what to pray as we ought. We lack wisdom. I want to point out that this is not an encouragement not to pray. Some people think this means that since we don’t know how to pray as we ought, and if the Spirit is going to pray for us anyway, then we don’t need to pray. But that would contradict many other passages of Scripture, such as James 4:2, which says. “You have not because you ask not.” God does want us to pray, and we are constantly encouraged to pray. Jesus taught us to pray. He asked His disciples to continue with Him in prayer in the Garden of Gethsamane. In Philippians 4:6, Paul tells us that in everything, with prayer and supplication, we are to let our requests be made known to God.

But the great encouragement should be that the Spirit prays with us, according to the will of God, to help us in our weakness. That weakness is our weakness in temptation, it’s our weakness in steadfastness. It’s the weakness of our body of flesh. And the Spirit who is in us, who understands and emphasizes with us, who also knows the heart of God and the will of God, helps us by praying with us.

This verse is commonly misinterpreted to try to vouch for some kind of ecstatic speech, speaking in tongues, or an unintelligible prayer language of our spirit. But to make such an extrapolation from this verse is very simply bad exegesis. Paul makes it clear that it is the Spirit praying, not us praying. He is praying for us, because we are weak. Because we are prone to sin. Because we live in a fallen world and in fleshly bodies. Because we don’t always know the will of God. And so God has given us a Helper, who prays for us according to the will of God.

I am reminded of Jesus’s admonition to Peter when He said, “Satan has demanded permission to sift you like wheat. But I have prayed for you that your faith may not fail; and you, when once you have turned again, strengthen your brothers.” So as the Spirit of Christ continues the ministry of Christ as our Helper, as our Comforter, He also prays for us, that our faith will not fail, that we might do the will of God. And that kind of intercession is essential to the process of our sanctification. We would never be able to do the will of God without the Spirit of Christ working in us, and helping us, and praying for us.

Everyone that is living on this earth will suffer from the effects of the fall to some degree or another. No one gets out of here alive. It is appointed for man to die, and after that the judgment. But for those who have trusted in Christ as their Savior, who have repented of their sin and been born again as children of God, there is a hope that this is not all that there is. We have a promise of God, who cannot lie, that we will receive an inheritance that is equal to the inheritance which is Christ’s. That hope gives us assurance and even joy as we live our lives with a view towards the future. If you are here this morning and you don’t have that hope, but have come to the realization that life without the Lord is hopeless, then I urge you to come to Christ today as your Savior and Lord. He who believes in Him will never die. Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved. And you can know the same hope that we have. Today is the acceptable day of salvation. Don’t waste this opportunity. Call on Him today and He will make you a child of God, an heir of salvation, and give you a future inheritance of glory with Christ.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, worship on the beach |

Children of God, Romans 8: 12-17

May

24

2020

thebeachfellowship

The point that I think Paul is making here is who is in control of your life.  He has made the case very clearly, starting in chapter 7, that there are two natures at war in your body; that which is flesh, and sinful, and that which is Spirit.  Paul uses the phrase or something like it again and again in this passage, a phrase like “of the Spirit,” “or by the Spirit,” or “led by the Spirit.”  

Now the question arises what is meant by “in the Spirit?”  A lot of people get off track on this whole subject of the Spirit.  The primary mistake they make is thinking that the Spirit is an unseen force rather than the third person of the Godhead.  So it’s not a matter of how much Spirit you have as if He is like electric current; ie, 110 volt or 220 volt, etc.  No, He is a person of the Godhead and we receive Him at salvation.  As Paul said in vs 9 “if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he is not His.”  So the Spirit is not just an unseen force but He is the Spirit of Christ, so that Paul say’s in the next verse that “If Christ dwells in you…”  So there is a oneness in the Godhead that enables us to have the Spirit of Christ in us through the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.

The other mistake that is commonly made is that being in the Spirit is communicated by a feeling.  They talk about getting goosebumps or succumbing to tears or feelings of ecstasy or  exuberance or some sort of feeling which they attribute to the Spirit.  So the Spirit is relegated to an emotion that moves you inwardly or makes you feel something.  But the Bible never relates the presence of the Spirit as a feeling, but as in knowledge. We know the presence of the Spirit because of knowledge based on God’s truth, not by some experience.

The Bible teaches that the Spirit is the Spirit of Christ.  He is a person that dwells in us.  And as God, He gives life to our spirit, so that we are spiritually alive in Christ, and our spirit is now reestablished in the hierarchy that was ordained by God in Creation, but which was overturned at the fall.  That hierarchy is spirit, soul and body.  And that reestablishment of our original design as humans was accomplished by the Spirit when we were born again. Jesus said in John 3:6 says “That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.”

Before our salvation we were living in bondage to the body, or flesh, but now our renewed spirit is governing our soul, or mind, and our mind is exerting control over our body or flesh.  That is the divine order that we are to operate under as born again Christians.  And our spirit is in communion with the Holy Spirit who indwells us and controls us.  

Now the old nature, the flesh, still remains in us.  And Paul says that the way we give control to the Spirit, or live by the Spirit, is to kill off the flesh. We don’t need to seek more of the Spirit, but we need to have less flesh. God said in Genesis 6:3, ““My Spirit shall not strive with man forever, because he also is flesh.” We are not obligated to listen to the flesh any longer nor to obey the flesh any longer.  Notice vs 12, “So then, brethren, we are under obligation, not to the flesh, to live according to the flesh—for if you are living according to the flesh, you must die; but if by the Spirit you are putting to death the deeds of the body, you will live.”  

So though the flesh remains we are not obligated to it. But we are indebted to the Spirit. 1Cor. 6:19-20 says, “Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and that you are not your own?  For you have been bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body.”  We belong to a new Master.  We have been married to a new Bridegroom.  If we were to continue to live according to the flesh he says in vs13 the outcome would be death.  But by the Spirit we are putting to death the deeds of the flesh and the outcome is life. So Paul says in 1 Cor. that he buffets his body and makes it his slave.

But what does Paul mean, by “the Spirit we put to death the deeds of the body?”  Does that mean we don’t do anything, we just lay back and watch the Spirit of Christ put to death the deeds of our body?  No, Paul relates this as something we are responsible for.  Notice that Paul says “you are putting to death the deeds of the body.”  Our body is something that is under the control of our mind, whether consciously or unconsciously.  So how do we by the Spirit put to death the deeds of the body?  Well, the answer must be, by the controlling influence of the Spirit, by the wisdom of the Spirit, we deliberately put to death anything that we would do  that is contrary to God.  We recognize by the illumination of the Spirit that certain things are sinful, that they are contrary to God’s will for us, and we decide in our will that we will not respond to those desires of the flesh. We choose to die to those things that the Spirit of God tells us are wrong. And we choose to live to those things which are of the Spirit.

In Joshua 24:15 the Israelites were told; “choose you this day whom you will serve.”  And in Matthew 7:24 Jesus told a parable about a man who built his house upon the sand, and another man who built his house upon a rock.  They made a choice which life they were going to live, based on hearing the words of Christ and acting or not acting upon them. There is a choice whom we will serve. We have a responsibility to choose whom to obey.

So then to the degree to which we yield to the Spirit and deny the flesh, then we do things of  the Spirit, and by the Spirit.  He controls us.  Paul states it that way in 2Cor. 5:14-15 “For the love of Christ controls us, having concluded this, that one died for all, therefore all died; and He died for all, so that they who live might no longer live for themselves, but for Him who died and rose again on their behalf.”

Now if you are being controlled by the Spirit, if you are choosing to serve Him and denying the flesh, then you are obviously being led by the Spirit.  He is leading, we are following His leading.  So Paul says in vs 14, “For all who are being led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God.”  Paul is now going to enumerate further the benefits of our relationship with God.  Paul has used the analogy of slaves to a new master, and he has compared us to the bride of Christ, and now Paul says we that are led by the Spirit are sons of God.  Now sons of God means children of God, as we can see in vs 16. But the reason that he generically lumps us all together as “sons” is because in that culture, the sons were the ones to whom was left the inheritance. 

We have already addressed this concept of being led by the Spirit. It means our sanctification (that is as we are formed into the image of Christ) is something that is orchestrated by the Spirit as He indwells us, as He corrects us, as He teaches us, as He controls us, as He illumines our hearts and minds, as He gifts us, and as He produces in us the fruits of the Spirit.

And since we are led by the Spirit, Paul says we are not under the spirit of slavery, which leads to fear, but we have received the spirit of adoption.  Consider how tremendous our salvation is in light of this verse.  We once were enslaved to sin and under the penalty of death.  But the blood of Jesus Christ was the payment by which we were bought by a new Master.  Under this new Master we were purchased to be slaves of righteousness.  But God was not content with keeping us as slaves.  Lo and behold, God loved us so much, even when we were slaves, that He wanted us to be HIs children, and so He adopted us. God chose us to be His children.   

Imagine a low level slave in Rome in the first century.  He is put on the auction block for sale.  And an incredibly wealthy and wise man buys that slave and takes him to his home.  But instead of sending him to the fields, he washes him, cleans him up, dresses him in the finest clothes, and announces to him that he is going to adopt him to be his son.  And then before the startled slave can comprehend how great it is to be a son, the master tells him that he is also going to make him the heir of all that his estate.  This formally worthless, penniless, hopeless slave is made an heir to an incredibly wealthy estate and is able to live with this man, not just as his master, but as his father.  That’s a picture of what God has done for us.

The apostle John writes in 1John 3:1 “See how great a love the Father has bestowed on us, that we would be called children of God; and [such] we are.”  I don’t know if the tremendous blessing of the fact that God is our Father has escaped you.  I fear that it has for me to some degree.  I have accepted the reality of my salvation to be sure.  I know that I am saved.  But I must confess that I have not fully comprehended all the wonders of the fact that I am a child of God, that He has chosen me to be His son and all the blessings that go with that.

Listen, in a great house in the time of the Romans, there would have been a tremendous difference between the way a son lived and acted, and the way a slave acted.  A son has an assurance and confidence as he lives in the house that comes from knowing that all belongs to him.  Whereas a slave lives with the awareness that nothing belongs to him, and his very life belongs to his master.  And so there would have been a sense of dread upon the slave, but a sense of freedom and confidence in the son.  And that is the relationship that we have with God as His adopted children.

And because we are adopted into God’s family as His children, we can call out to Him, “Abba, Father!”  Abba is the Aramaic for father.  Paul, as did Mark, adds Father after Abba for their Greek and Roman readers.  But it’s not necessary to say both.   Father is an intimate expression of our relationship and of His love for us.

Perhaps you have seen photographs of President John F. Kennedy  that were taken in the Oval Office, and his young son is hiding under his desk.  Here is the most important man in the world, and yet when his son calls out “Daddy” he stops everything he is doing, and scoops up the young boy and sets him on his lap.  That’s a picture of the relationship we have with our Father, whose ears are tuned to hear our cry of “Abba.”

Jesus called the Father “Abba” in the Garden of Gethsemane. He used “Father” when He taught His disciples to pray the Lord’s Prayer. He constantly referred to God as His Father. And the amazing thing is that we have that same privilege that Christ had as the Son of God, as we are the children of God.

Now as to that assurance that we are indeed the children of God, it says in vs 16, “The Spirit Himself testifies with our spirit that we are children of God.”  So there are two that bear witness to our relationship with God.  The Holy Spirit gives evidence to us by the fact that we are filled with His presence, and by the fact that He leads us.  If we had not the Spirit of Christ, Paul said earlier, then we would not belong to Him.  But the fact that we have the Spirit in us is evidence that we are His children.  

But also Paul says that our spirit bears witness that we are His children as well.  How is that? John gives us an indication of how that occurs in 1John 3:10, “By this the children of God and the children of the devil are obvious: anyone who does not practice righteousness is not of God, nor the one who does not love his brother.”

So as our spirit is in communion with the Holy Spirit and under His leading, then it controls the mind and body so that the deeds of the flesh are put to death and the works of righteousness are accomplished in us, is that not evidence that our spirit is regenerated and that we are children of God?  Paul says that it certainly is.  

Now that sonship that Paul speaks of expands logically into heirship. Vs 17, “and if children, heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with [Him] so that we may also be glorified with [Him.]”  The state of being a child implies the benefit of being an heir, which of course, means that there is an inheritance in store for us.  This is an immediate benefit and blessings which comes from being a child of God, but there is also a future blessing which comes as Paul says at the end of this verse “that we may also be glorified with Him.”

In an inheritance, there is a will. It’s often called the last will and testament of so and so.  And the one who is writing the will, is called a testator.  So who is the testator of this will?  It is no less than God, our Father.  Christ of course is the main heir of the Father, but again the amazing thing is that He has declared us to be co heirs with Christ. 

Let’s consider the inheritance that God has promised us.  Like the imaginary master who adopted his slave, our Father’s estate is beyond our imagination.  Haggai 2:8 says that all the gold and silver are His.  Psalm 50:10 says that He owns the cattle on a thousand hills and all the animals in the forests. Everything belongs to Him, and He is ruler over all. Solomon in all his glory can not begin to compare with the glory that belongs to God. 

According to Revelation 3:12 we will inherit a new name.  In Rev.4:4 John says we shall receive a crown of gold. In chapter 20 vs 4 John says with Him we shall reign. Probably the greatest aspect of our inheritance is found in 1 John 3:2, “Beloved, now we are children of God, and it has not appeared as yet what we will be. We know that when He appears, we will be like Him, because we will see Him just as He is.”  We will be like Him.  What an amazing thought, that we will become like God.

In vs 18, which we will be looking at in more detail next week, Paul says, “For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is to be revealed to us.” 

In 1Cor. 2:9  Paul quotes from Isaiah saying, “but just as it is written, ‘THINGS WHICH EYE HAS NOT SEEN AND EAR HAS NOT HEARD, AND [which] HAVE NOT ENTERED THE HEART OF MAN, ALL THAT GOD HAS PREPARED FOR THOSE WHO LOVE HIM.’”  The long and short of it is our inheritance cannot be even comprehended.  And what is known, especially that the glory which was given to Jesus is the same glory that we are promised to share with Him, that we will rule with Him, we who were slaves will become kings with God,  is unfathomable.

The caveat though is that there will be suffering experienced here if we are God’s children. If we will share in Christ’s glory, then we will also share in Christ’s suffering. And perhaps that is another witness of the fact that we are children of God.  The devil certainly recognizes the Spirit of Christ in us and he will do all that he can within his power to make us suffer, hoping that we might deny Christ, even as Job’s wife urged him to deny Christ to end his suffering. 

But if we are children of God, and if we believe the promises that our Father has given to us, then we cannot deny our Father. And the promises that we have are the hope that is within us, that enables us to suffer with Him, so that we might be glorified with Him in the resurrection. 

Suffering as a Christian can take many forms.  It can mean alienation from loved ones.  It can cause problems on the job, even possibly losing your job because of your testimony or your refusal to participate in certain things that they want you to do.  Suffering may take place at school, for those who are still of that age.  It may take the form of being a social outcast. 

But it’s important that if we suffer, as Paul indicates, it’s because we are a Christian, and not because we have done wrong and suffer the consequences of it.  Peter says in 1 Peter 4:12-19  “Beloved, do not be surprised at the fiery ordeal among you, which comes upon you for your testing, as though some strange thing were happening to you;  but to the degree that you share the sufferings of Christ, keep on rejoicing, so that also at the revelation of His glory you may rejoice with exultation.  If you are reviled for the name of Christ, you are blessed, because the Spirit of glory and of God rests on you.  Make sure that none of you suffers as a murderer, or thief, or evildoer, or a troublesome meddler;  but if [anyone suffers] as a Christian, he is not to be ashamed, but is to glorify God in this name.  For [it is] time for judgment to begin with the household of God; and if [it] [begins] with us first, what [will be] the outcome for those who do not obey the gospel of God?  AND IF IT IS WITH DIFFICULTY THAT THE RIGHTEOUS IS SAVED, WHAT WILL BECOME OF THE GODLESS MAN AND THE SINNER?  Therefore, those also who suffer according to the will of God shall entrust their souls to a faithful Creator in doing what is right.”

Let me close then by reminding you of what we started with.  That if you are of the Spirit, if you are being led by the Spirit, then you are being controlled by the Spirit.  The Spirit of Christ works in you to sanctify you. Peter said in 1 Peter 1, you “are chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, by the sanctifying work of the Spirit, to obey Jesus Christ and be sprinkled with His blood.”  I urge you then as children of God to yield to the Spirit of Christ.  He will speak to you the words of Christ and bring to your remembrance the things that He has taught us.  He will correct you and convict you when you stray from the way of righteousness.  Listen to Him, follow him, and He will direct your paths.  And that path is the path of righteousness, whereby we are being conformed to the image of Christ here on earth, that we might share in the glory of Christ in the future consummation of the kingdom when Christ returns for the children of God.  You are children of God.  May the grace of God enable  us to live as such. 

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, worship on the beach |

No Condemnation, Romans 8:1-11

May

17

2020

thebeachfellowship

In our study of Romans 7 over the last couple of weeks, we learned that Paul describes an inner  struggle that is going on in our life as a Christian.  He summarized that struggle in chapter 7 vs 25, “So then, on the one hand I myself with my mind am serving the law of God, but on the other, with my flesh the law of sin.”  This is the summary of the struggle that Paul describes in chapter 7. He said there are two laws or principles at work in him.  And this is the personal experience of Paul.  Notice the redundant use of “I myself.”  I think Paul wants us to know that this is not just theoretical postulation. But it’s the actual experience of someone whom we would all agree was probably one of the most godly people that ever lived.

And Paul makes himself an example so that we might have encouragement, as we are also beset with trials and temptations, and we often find ourselves falling back into the sin of the old man which we thought we were delivered from. But like Paul, we must realize that there are two natures or principles at work in us, what he calls the law of sin in the flesh or body, and the law of the Spirit in the mind.  He says in [Rom 7:21 “I find then the principle that evil is present in me, the one who wants to do good.  For I joyfully concur with the law of God in the inner man,  but I see a different law in the members of my body, waging war against the law of my mind and making me a prisoner of the law of sin which is in my members.”

This struggle in the life of Paul caused him to cry out in a sense of frustration, “Wretched man that I am, who will set me free from this body of death?” The answer he gives is that thank God, Christ Jesus has set us free from the body of death. What that means is that God has declared us free forensically in the court of divine judgment.  Another person has died for our transgressions so that we are pardoned and set free. But though we have been declared free and given new life in our spirit, the flesh is a creature of habit.  The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.  The flesh has not been made new.  The spirit in us has been reborn and is new but it must now exercise dominion over the old nature.  The flesh still exists, but we are no longer obligated to it. We are set free to serve the Spirit by the spirit, through a renewed  mind, which takes dominion over the flesh. 

Now having understood that law of the two natures, and the new dominion over the flesh which we have in Christ, Paul goes on to add a really important principle that underscores this new life in the Spirit.  And the principle is this: Rom 8:1 “Therefore there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” No condemnation means freedom not only from the guilt of sin, but freedom from the enslaving power of sin.   Those who have trusted in Christ have been justified, that is freed from the condemnation of sin.  And those who have trusted in Christ have are being sanctified, the mind and the flesh are being set free from the condemning power of sin as a process of the Spirit of God working in us.  

Justification is accomplished for the believer when he comes to Jesus in faith, and the penalty of sin which is due to us is transferred to Jesus Christ.  He paid the penalty for our sin.  He was condemned to death for what we did.  That is what “no condemnation” means for those who are in Christ.  We are not condemned because He was condemned in our place.  He died in our place.  And God is not so unjust as to still hold us accountable when someone else has paid the penalty. So therefore there is no condemnation to those who are in Christ.

Sanctification happens when the justified believer receives the indwelling of the Holy Spirit who gives us life, who gives us power, who gives us a new heart, so that  the life which we live in the flesh is now accomplished through the power of the Spirit within us, so that we have new desires, and that new desire is to please God.  The sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit is in dominion over our lives so that we no longer live according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit.  Listen carefully to Gal. 2:20,  “I have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the [life] which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself up for me.”  Notice, the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God.”  The Spirit of God in me gives me the power to live in the flesh.

And that’s exactly the point that Paul states in vs2, “For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has set you free from the law of sin and of death.”  So through Christ, the working principle of the Spirit has set us free from the working principle of sin and death.  Notice Paul speaks about the “law (or principle) of the Spirit of life.”   In other words, the Spirit is life and He imparts life, both spiritual life and physical life.  He makes that point more explicit in vs 11, which says, “But if the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit who dwells in you.”  Notice; “your mortal bodies.” That is your flesh has been given life through the Spirit.

The point should be clear, that the Holy Spirit is given to us that we might have the power to live the life that God has given us.  Before our salvation we lived according to the power of the flesh. We were enslaved to sin, and thus incurred the condemnation of death.  But upon justification, we are given the Spirit of God that we might have new life according to the Spirit and by His power we have the power of the risen life, so that we do not live under the dominion of sin, but under the dominion of the Spirit of God.

So on the one hand in my flesh I am still enslaved to sin, so I find it difficult to do the things which I ought to do.  But on the other hand, the Holy Spirit has set me free so that I am no longer obligated to the flesh and by the Spirit working in me I exercise control over the fleshly nature. There are two natures in my being.  Though I am still a prisoner in the flesh, I am literally in the same old body, yet I have been set free in my spirit. Since I am free in the spirit,  Satan cannot make me do the things that I know are wrong anymore.  Sin has no power over me.  There may still be a weakness in my flesh, a propensity to do wrong,  but there is a greater power working in my spirit through the Spirit of God that enables me to be free from my weaknesses.  

As I quoted the ex slave trader turned preacher John Newton a couple of weeks ago as saying, “I am not what I ought to be, I am not what I want to be, I am not what I hope to be in another world; but still I am not what I once used to be, and by the grace of God I am what I am.”  So I might add; I am a work in progress.  I have been justified, declared righteous in the sight of God, and by the Spirit of God at work in me I am being sanctified, that is being made holy in my body by conformity to the image of Jesus Christ through the Spirit working in me.

This sanctification is accomplished not by any strength of my flesh, but by what Jesus has done for me.  vs.3,4: “For what the Law could not do, weak as it was through the flesh, God [did:] sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and [as an offering] for sin, He condemned sin in the flesh, so that the requirement of the Law might be fulfilled in us, who do not walk according to the flesh but according to the Spirit.”

Trying to keep the  law in the strength of my flesh, says Paul, could never accomplish my deliverance from sin, because my flesh was too weak. It wasn’t the laws fault, it was my fault. I can do my best to try to keep the law, but sooner or later I fail miserably because of the weakness of my flesh.  But God did for me what I could not do for myself. 

God sent Jesus to take our condemnation.  We are going to be singing the song, “Hallelujah, What a Savior” in a few minutes.  And there is a line in that song which speaks of this.  It says of Christ, the Man of Sorrows, “bearing shame and scoffing rude, in my place condemned He stood, sealed my pardon with His blood, Hallelujah, what a Savior!”  

In Christ’s incarnation, He took on human nature.  I want you to think of this for a moment.  Joe and Nick and I were talking about it on Friday morning in my backyard.  Jesus, who was equal with God in all respects, the exact representation of the nature of God, who was one with God, took on human nature in addition to His divine nature so that He might be like us.  We were made to be like Him, created in His image, in His likeness.  But in sin we fell from that spiritual state, so that in order to save us, and because of His great love for us, Christ lowered Himself, and took on human form, that He might be one of us, that we might be made one with God. He took on two natures even as we have two natures.  And the Bible teaches that He ascended into heaven in that same human body and is thus ever with the Lord and will come again in that same manner.  And so Christ remains the God Man forever so that He might redeem us from the curse of the law.  What a Savior indeed!

We find that same principle stated in Phil. 2:5-8 “Have this attitude in yourselves which was also in Christ Jesus,  who, although He existed in the form of God, did not regard equality with God a thing to be grasped,  but emptied Himself, taking the form of a bond-servant, [and] being made in the likeness of men.  Being found in appearance as a man, He humbled Himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.”  

Notice there the phrase “being made in the likeness of men.”  That’s similar to the thought here in Romans 8:3, “God sending His own Son the the likeness of sinful flesh.”  And God condemned His own Son for our sake, that the righteous requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us. The requirement of the law for sin was death.  And it was in Christ’s flesh that God condemned and punished sinful man. It was in our place that Jesus stood condemned and bore the wrath of God’s punishment for sin. We cannot comprehend the horror that the Holy One of God had to bear as He became sin for us in order to be our substitute.  And yet He did it for us so that we might be set free and receive life.  Our response should be that of gratitude for what He did for us, we might respond by striving to fulfill  His standard of righteousness.

Vs. 4 says, “so that the requirement of the Law might be fulfilled in us.” And we strive to fulfill that standard of righteousness according to the leading of the Holy Spirit.  So that according to the last part of the verse, we “do not walk according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit.”  Righteousness then is the fruit of the Spirit.  On Wednesday nights we are studying 1 Corinthians, and we are looking right now at the gifts of the Spirit.  And I made the point then, which I hope you remember, which is that the gifts of the Spirit are given to produce the fruits of the Spirit.  What are the fruits of the Spirit? The short answer is righteousness. 

Galatians 5:22-23 “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,  gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law.”  To walk in the flesh is to walk according to my sinful nature, which results in selfishness and greed and anger and so forth.  But the opposite way of life is to be led by the Spirit to produce works of righteousness, which are the fruits of the Spirit.

A few verses earlier in Gal 5:16-18, Paul says, “But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desire of the flesh.  For the flesh sets its desire against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; for these are in opposition to one another, so that you may not do the things that you please.  But if you are led by the Spirit, you are not under the Law.”  He says if you are led by the Spirit, you are not under the law, that is under the condemnation of the law.

Back in Romans 8, Paul tells us how we can accomplish this by saying in vs 5, “For those who are according to the flesh set their minds on the things of the flesh, but those who are according to the Spirit, the things of the Spirit.  For the mind set on the flesh is death, but the mind set on the Spirit is life and peace,  because the mind set on the flesh is hostile toward God; for it does not subject itself to the law of God, for it is not even able [to do so,]  and those who are in the flesh cannot please God.”

Those who live according to the flesh allow themselves to be governed by the lusts, the passions, the desires of the flesh. That’s what they are attuned to.  That’s what they live for; physical things.  And the sinful nature takes opportunity through the desires of their flesh to enslave them to serve the flesh.  They live for things that they think will satisfy the flesh.  That’s what defines their life.

But the opposite attitude should be that of the believer, who now live according to the Spirit.  And  Paul says in vs5 we do that by setting our mind on the things of the Spirit. Therefore, we are controlled by the Spirit, so we focus on the things of the Spirit.  And I would suggest that such things of the Spirit are found in the word of God. The Spirit wrote the word of God. Jesus referred to the Holy Spirit as the Spirit of Truth.  Not the Spirit of emotion, or the Spirit of feelings. So the way to set your mind on things of God is to read scripture.  That is how the Spirit speaks to us.  It’s not through suggestion in the mind. I would warn against listening for a still small voice in your head.  There are a lot of crazy people running around claiming that they have heard God tell them something.  God speaks to us through His word and the preaching of His word.  Every thing that claims it is God speaking must be reconciled to His word.  

So there are two natures, and men must take sides with one nature above another.  On the one side are those who live according to the flesh, and the other side those who live according to the Spirit.  And there are two outcomes for those lives.  The life lived according to the flesh is death, but the life lived according to the Spirit is life and peace.  If a person is focused on the flesh, then Paul says that the end of that person is death.  But if you are focused on the Spirit, then you will have life, as opposed to death, and then the added benefit, which is peace.

What is peace? That subject came up the other day as well,  in my backyard discussion with Joe and Nick.  Jesus said, My peace I give to you, not as the world gives.  So the peace from God is not the same as the peace we often think of in human terms.  I believe that the peace Paul is talking about is the assurance that your sins are forgiven, that your circumstances are being used for God’s good purposes, and that nothing will ever separate you from the love of God.  

But there is another aspect of peace that Paul indicates here by the statement he makes in vs 7, where he says, “because the mind set on the flesh is hostile toward God; for it does not subject itself to the law of God, for it is not even able [to do so,]  and those who are in the flesh cannot please God.”  He speaks of a hostility towards God by the one who is focused on the flesh.  Hostility is the opposite of peace.  Hostility means they are at war with God.  And the basis of that war with God is they do not submit to the law of God.  God says such and such is sin.  And they say, no such and such is fun.  I like it.  It seems good to me. It feels good so I’m going to do it.  That’s insubordination towards God. 

But peace with God is found by walking according to the Spirit.  It’s a peace of contentment, a lack of striving, a sense of security. But those, Paul says in vs 8 who are living according to the flesh cannot please God. I can picture a mother with a small child who she is holding by the hand, trying to steer this child through a supermarket, and he is struggling, trying to grab things, trying to resist his mother’s guidance.  That’s a picture of living in the flesh in hostility against God.  But the opposite is peace, allowing the Spirit to lead you, being obedient to His will, and being content with His direction.

Now Paul is writing to believers.  And so the difficulty comes in knowing is this person who is living according to the flesh a believer or an unbeliever?  It’s tempting to say it is an unbeliever.  But the context should remind us of chapter 7 vs 22, when Paul said “For I joyfully concur with the law of God in the inner man,  but I see a different law in the members of my body, waging war against the law of my mind and making me a prisoner of the law of sin which is in my members.” Paul, the epitome of a Christian said he has a war going on in his body, so that he ended up doing the very thing that he hated. 

So then we must concede that even for believers there is a struggle going on between our two natures, with the result of our life being see sawed between discontent and peace. Isaiah 26:3 says “you will keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on you because he trusts in you.”  The problem is that we don’t always keep our mind fixed on the Lord. Our mind is not always steadfast. We let our minds start to covet, to think about what others seem to be enjoying in this life, we think about things that appeal to our flesh. And like Peter who tried to walk on water, when we take our eyes off of Jesus we end up sinking fast.  Peter was a believer.  But his experience is evidence that it’s possible to live in the flesh even still.

However, the assurance that we are in Christ comes from the Spirit of Christ living in you.  If you don’t have that, then certainly you are an unbeliever, living according to the flesh and as such under the law of condemnation. Paul says in vs 9 that if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him.  We can know that we are Christians by the confirmation within of the Holy Spirit.  That confirmation is a new heart, new desires, a mind that is focused on the things of God.  I can tell you from experience that conversion results in a hunger for God, a hunger to read His word, to know Him, and a desire to please Him.  And this doesn’t come from the flesh, it can only come from the Spirit. Paul says in vs7 that the fleshly mind is not able to please God.  So a desire for God can only come from the Spirit who is in you.

So in vs9 Paul says “you, however, are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, seeing that the Spirit of God dwells in you.” “If Christ is in you, though the body is dead because of sin, yet the spirit is alive because of righteousness. But if the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit who dwells in you.”

Let me try to summarize this then so that we can bring this to a close. The point that Paul is making is that if you have the evidence of the Spirit of Christ in you, then even though the body is sinful, yet your spirit is alive because of the imputed righteousness of Jesus Christ. He justified you, made you righteous by His death. But the same Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead, who also dwells in you, will also give life to your mortal body, that is your flesh.  

The point is, we can have victory over sin. That’s what sanctification means; power over sin.  We are not under obligation to the flesh anymore.  Oh, the old nature is still there. There is still an inherent weakness in our flesh that we have to struggle with.  But as we yield to the Spirit, He will give life to our flesh, that we might please the Lord even while in our flesh.  That we might do the works of righteousness even while in our flesh.  Because the Spirit rules over the mind, and the mind rules over the flesh.  And by the Spirit of God the dominion of righteousness can prevail over our sinful nature so that we do not have to succumb to it, but we can live for God.  

Sanctification then is being conformed in our bodies to the image of Jesus Christ.  As Romans 12:1,2 says, “Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, [which is] your spiritual service of worship.  And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.”

We present our bodies, our flesh to God, yielding it in submission to the Holy Spirit, and at the same time fix our minds on things of God, no longer fixing our minds on this world, on the things of this world, and in fixing our minds on the Lord, our minds are transformed, and then in the flesh we can do the will of God, we can do the works of righteousness, that which is good and acceptable and pleasing to God.

Our Christianity may be marked by two natures that are struggling.  But we do not have to live two different lives.  We don’t live one way on Sunday morning and another way on Monday morning.  But by the working of the Spirit of God and by fixing our minds on Him, we can walk with the Spirit day by day, and do the things that are pleasing to God.  We can have the peace which comes from being in fellowship with God.  

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, worship at the beach |

The struggle in sanctification, Romans 7:7-25

May

10

2020

thebeachfellowship

By the use of three different analogies in the previous passages, Paul has shown that to be a Christian there must be a change by death of the old man, and a new life in the new man.  He first showed that in chapter 5 starting in vs 15 as the old man, represented by Adam, needed to die, so that he might be resurrected to new life in Christ. The next analogy Paul used is found in chapter 6 starting in vs 16 which likens the old man in slavery to sin, and the death of that man which brings freedom from sin, so that we might be enslaved in the new man to righteousness.

Then last week, Paul used the analogy of marriage in chapter 7 vs 1, which as the old man dies the woman is free to marry a new husband which is Christ and the fruit of that relationship is righteousness.  So in all three cases, the point that is emphasized is that there is a necessity of death of the old man, that we might have new life in the spirit.  Now that’s the basic premise of our salvation, that there needs to be a death to the old man, and we must be spiritually reborn.  

Jesus said as much to Nicodemus in John 3, “you must be born again.”  Nicodemus didn’t understand what He meant by that.  So Jesus explained, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.”  So man is born naturally in the flesh, which is characterized by water, and then he must be reborn in the spirit.

For those of you who have been with us awhile, please forgive my redundancy in relating the following.  But I think it might be helpful in understanding today’s passage especially.  When God created man, He made him with three components of his being.  God made man spirit, soul and body.  And He made him in that order of dominance; first spirit, then soul, and then body.

When man sinned, God said that the penalty for sin was that man would surely die.  And what died that day that Adam sinned was the spirit of man. The essence of man that was designed for communion with God, that was made to spiritually rule over the soul and the body, died as a result of sin.  The process of the body dying also started at the moment, but that death took longer.  However, the spirit died immediately.

And as a result of the death of the spirit, the spiritual order of man’s being was overturned.  In God’s design, the spirit was to rule over the soul, and the soul was to rule over the body.  But in the post-fall man, that order was inverted, the body now ruled over the soul, and the spirit was dead. Now man is governed by the lusts of the flesh, and the mind or soul is under the dominion of the body, especially the sins of the body.  So the mind or soul serves the body.

However, when a man is born again, the Spirit of God brings to life a new spirit within man.  And the divine order of man’s being is reestablished; man is once again made spirit, soul, and body, in the original order of dominance. Therefore, sin no longer rules through the flesh, but the Spirit reigns over our mind, and our mind controls our body. And to exercise control the body, Paul often refers to it in 1 Cor. 9:37 as discipling his body and making it his slave. 

So then, God’s divine plan of salvation is accomplished whereby man becomes a new creation and old things are passed away and all things become new. But what then? The penalty for sin has been paid for, and the power over sin through the indwelling of the Spirit has been made available. We are born again spiritually into a new life. But are we totally free from the influence of the flesh?  Has sin been completely eradicated in our life? 

Well, that is the question that Paul has been trying to address in the last couple of chapters. And today, I hope to show you how Paul perceives the dichotomy that exists within the believer.  And what is particularly helpful, is that in this section of scripture, Paul relates this dilemma as something that pertains to him. Notice the consistent use of personal pronouns “I” and “me” as he illustrates this dilemma.  And that should be an encouragement to us.  This struggle that is prevalent within us is not something that necessarily indicates a moral failing on our part, so that we become disillusioned with Christianity because we feel like such a failure.  But we can say that if Paul had problems in this regard, and I think the text makes it clear that he did, then we can have assurance that such difficulties in the flesh are common to even the best of Christians.  And in fact, our ability to recognize our deficiencies indicates that we are in fact sons and daughters of God, in spite of struggling at times with the old nature.

So Paul summarized the three analogies we spoke of earlier with the following statement in vs 5 “For while we were in the flesh, the sinful passions, which were aroused by the Law, were at work in the members of our body to bear fruit for death.  But now we have been released from the Law, having died to that by which we were bound, so that we serve in newness of the Spirit and not in oldness of the letter.”

Paul speaks of the old sinful passions being aroused by the law.  He speaks of being released from the law.  So the question that might arise then, is the law bad? Is the law something that was analogous to the old man and therefore is sinful?  He says in vs 7, 8, “What shall we say then? Is the Law sin? May it never be! On the contrary, I would not have come to know sin except through the Law; for I would not have known about coveting if the Law had not said, “You shall not covet.  But sin, taking opportunity through the commandment, produced in me coveting of every kind; for apart from the Law sin is dead.”

So the answer is no, the law is not sinful.  “On the contrary” Paul says, the law reveals sin.  Paul said the same thing back in chapter 5 vs 20, “The Law came in so that the transgression would increase.”  The law made sin more magnified.  The holy standard of God made sin that much more apparent.

Notice Paul said he would not have come to know sin had it not been through the law.  Now that does not negate what he said in chapters 1-3, that all men have a form of law written in their hearts which condemns them when they sin.  But I think he is referring here to the more distinct knowledge of his sin that came through the commandments.  It would appear that he is speaking here directly about the 10 commandments because he mentions particularly the law of coveting, which is the 10th commandment.

We need to remember that Paul was a Pharisee, someone who kept the law to the ninth degree. They were fastidious about the law.  But as Jesus pointed out in the Sermon on the Mount, they may have attempted to keep the letter of the law, but they failed to keep the spirit of the law. So Paul writes that there was something about the 10th commandment that shook his confidence in his ability to keep the law.  And perhaps that is because the 10th commandment speaks of coveting, of desire.  It speaks of a sinful heart in wanting what is not yours.  It was one thing to say you had not committed adultery, or murder, but it is another thing to examine your motives or your thoughts in light of God’s law.  And when Paul considered that, he was convicted of his sinfulness.

And he adds that sin taking opportunity through the law produced in him coveting of every kind.  And what I think he means by that is a reiteration of the earlier principle about law and sin in 5:20.  In other words, the law magnified his sin, and because of the law he saw that his coveting extended to all sorts of things, far beyond what he may have originally been aware of.  Coveting is a sin that applies to all other sins and in fact, may be the instigating factor in adultery, murder, lying, idolatry and so forth.

And that brings up an important aspect of our sanctification.  As we draw near to God, as we are molded into the image of Christ, we become more aware of our sin, not less aware.  That person that has little or no awareness of sin is not more sanctified, not more holy, but more carnal.  However, the man whose heart is right towards God and is being conformed to Christ becomes ever more aware of his sinfulness and how much he fails as a Christian in his walk.

Consider for instance, the saints of old, who did not take pride in their righteousness, but fell on their face before God, having become more aware of their shortcomings. Job, whom God called a blameless and upright man, said in Job 42:6, “I abhor myself and repent in dust and ashes.”  Daniel, undoubtedly a great man of God, said in his prayer, “O Lord, we have sinned and done wrong, we are covered in shame because of our sins against You.” Isaiah, a great prophet fell on his face before God and said in Isaiah 6:5, “Woe is me, for I am a man of unclean lips.”  So then it is not  immature, carnal believers who are aware of their sin, but the more mature spiritually you are, the more aware you are of your sin.

So not only is the law not sinful, but Paul says that apart from the law sin is dead. Maybe it would be easier to understand if “dead” was translated as “dormant.” Without the written law, you are unaware of the terrible, deadly nature of sin. By nature you can be complacent in your sin, almost unaware of it, but when the law appears, it makes you aware of your sin.  So Paul says in vs 9, “once I was alive apart from law, but when the commandment came, sin sprang to life, and I died.” In other words, the spiritual deadness had occurred in him because of sin, but when the commandment came in, sin sprang to life, he became aware of his sin, and he died to that self satisfied complacency.  What he says there reminds me of Adam and Eve before their sin, having no shame that they were naked.  But when they broke the law of God, sin sprang to life, and they became aware they were naked, and they tried to hide from God.

He goes on to say in vs10, “and this commandment, which was to result in life, proved to result in death for me; for sin, taking an opportunity through the commandment, deceived me and through it killed me. So then, the Law is holy, and the commandment is holy and righteous and good.”  Notice Paul isn’t saying here that keeping the commandments was supposed to bring you salvation.  But what he is saying is that the commandment was to result in life.  In other words, the law was to keep you from death, to keep you from sin. Think back to the Garden of Eden, the commandment not to eat of the tree didn’t give them life.  But it preserved their life. Breaking the commandment brought death.  So the commandment was intended to keep you from death, that you might have life.  But sin deceived me, Paul said, and through the law, killed me.  The wages of sin is death, according to the law.

But Paul is quick to point out that doesn’t negate the goodness of the law.  The law is holy, righteous and good.  The law reveals the character of God. The law is the means God uses to train us in righteousness. And we know that God is holy, righteous and good. So it’s not the laws fault that we sinned. It’s the fault of the sin nature that was inherent in us, which was made apparent by the law.

He says that in vs13, “Therefore did that which is good become a cause of death for me? May it never be! Rather it was sin, in order that it might be shown to be sin by effecting my death through that which is good, so that through the commandment sin would become utterly sinful.” The law did not cause us to sin.  But the  commandment made us aware of our sin as utterly sinful, that we might not be complacent in our sin, but be driven to the cross to be delivered from sin by the Savior. The cause of death is sin, not the commandment.  The commandment simply made sin more apparently sinful.

Now that Paul had explained the principles of the law and sin and the way in which they worked in him, he then relates his experience of it.  And this is his experience while yet a Christian.  Thus we can relate to his experience because it is so often our experience. And as I said earlier, he isn’t speaking as an unbeliever, nor is he speaking as an immature believer.  But contrarily, he is speaking as a mature believer who by the Spirit of God in him has become more convicted of his sinfulness.

And to begin his explanation of his experience he states the principle of his dual nature in vs14; “For we know that the Law is spiritual, but I am of flesh, sold into bondage to sin.”  This is where we see clearly the principle regarding the three components of our being, that I spoke of earlier.  We are made spirit, soul, and body. And Paul here says that the law is spiritual.  It is something that reflects the character of God. The Holy Spirit works through the law of God to convict the Christian of sin and righteousness.  The law speaks to the spiritual nature of man and only by the spiritual nature can it be ascertained in it’s fullness.  And it can only be accomplished in the realm of the Spirit.  That’s what we saw when we studied the Sermon on the Mount last summer.  The only way to accomplish any of the laws that Jesus was talking about was by first becoming spiritual, a new creation.  So the law is spiritual.

So the law is spiritual, but, Paul says, I am carnal, so as a slave to sin. I believe he is referring to the inherent carnal nature of his body.  He has a new spirit, but he still has the same body.  A body that was born into the slavery of sin. It’s a common theme in the  history of the Jews that even though they had been delivered from slavery in the exodus by Moses, they still had the desire to return to that slavery and still returned to the sins of Egypt. So also Paul acknowledges that the carnal aspect of his nature are still there. He was sold, he said, as a slave to sin. I think he is speaking of his inherited nature from Adam.  David said in Ps.51:5, “Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, And in sin my mother conceived me.”  So sold into sin from his birth by nature.

And that sin nature is very much in effect, even though he has been born again.  Notice vs15, “For what I am doing, I do not understand; for I am not practicing what I [would] like to [do,] but I am doing the very thing I hate.”  Now Paul is writing this as a converted person.  For the unsaved do not hate their sin, but they love evil. Jesus said in John 3:19, “men loved the darkness rather than the Light, for their deeds were evil.” But the converted man hates his sin, because it goes against his new nature.

Vs16 “But if I do the very thing I do not want [to do,] I agree with the Law, [confessing] that the Law is good.”  That’s what repentance is, ladies and gentlemen.  Repentance is agreeing with the law.  The solution is not to disregard the law and continue in sin.  The way to sanctification is to recognize that the law is good, recognize when I fall short, and confess it to God and agree with God and ask by His help to be obedient to it.

Paul then in vs 17 restates the sin principle that is at work in his sinful nature, in his flesh. And he sees it in opposition to his better nature, that is the spiritual nature that has been reborn. Vs 17-20  “So now, no longer am I the one doing it, but sin which dwells in me.  For I know that nothing good dwells in me, that is, in my flesh; for the willing is present in me, but the doing of the good [is] not. For the good that I want, I do not do, but I practice the very evil that I do not want.  But if I am doing the very thing I do not want, I am no longer the one doing it, but sin which dwells in me.”  

So he discovers another law.  Not a law of God, but a principle working in him.  And the principle is summarized in vs 21; “I find then the principle that evil is present in me, the one who wants to do good.”  Notice how Paul characterizes this evil nature, “evil is present in me.” The RSV translates it this way; “So I find it to be a law that when I want to do right, evil lies close at hand.”  It reminds me of God’s warning  to Cain in Genesis 4:7, “And if you do not do well, sin is crouching at the door; and its desire is for you, but you must master it.”  Sin is like a crouching lion waiting for an opportunity.  And Paul says he recognizes that in himself.

I wonder how much of our problem with sin is because we give the devil an opportunity by going some place we should not be, or looking at something we shouldn’t look at, or thinking of something we should not be thinking of. Or as Paul said was his problem, desiring something that we shouldn’t desire. That’s giving the devil and opportunity. We may think we have it under control and we aren’t going to sin, but this principle of sin that was crouching at the door sees the opportunity and comes alive and you fall.  Paul said in Eph. 4:26-27 “BE ANGRY, AND [yet] DO NOT SIN; do not let the sun go down on your anger,  and do not give the devil an opportunity.”

But then in vs22, Paul differentiates between the spirit and the flesh, and he reiterates that spiritually he loves God’s law, but there is another law or principle working in his flesh. He says in vs 22,  “For I joyfully concur with the law of God in the inner man,  but I see a different law in the members of my body, waging war against the law of my mind and making me a prisoner of the law of sin which is in my members.”

What Paul is saying is that there is a war going on in him between the law of God which is spiritual, and the law of sin which is in his body.  And the interesting thing is that the battlefield is in the soul, or the mind.   The fact that he uses the word law as a descriptor for all three elements of man, the spirit, soul and body, indicates that he is talking about the governing principles of the spirit, soul and body.

But let’s not pass over too quickly this principle that the soul, or the mind is the battleground between the spirit and the body.  Remember in my first illustration about how God designed us as spirit, soul and body, and then the order was reversed by sin so that it was body, soul and spirit, in both cases the soul stays in the middle.  The mind either subjects itself to the governing principle of sin in the body, or it subjects itself to the governing law of the spirit, depending on whether or not you have been born again.

And we see that necessity of renewing the mind emphasized again and again in scripture.  The most prominent passage concerning that is found in Romans 12:1.  “Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, [which is] your spiritual service of worship.  And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.”  

So there you see the necessity of offering your body sacrificially to the Lord, and the need to renew your mind so that you may do the will of God.  We that have been saved have a new spirit, and the divine order has been restored.  But for that order to work as it should our minds have to be transformed as well, in submission to the Spirit effecting the spiritual discipline over our bodies, or over the flesh.  And our minds are transformed by the washing of the word of God.

Another text which speaks to that is Eph. 4:22-24  “that, in reference to your former manner of life, you lay aside the old self, which is being corrupted in accordance with the lusts of deceit,  and that you be renewed in the spirit of your mind,  and put on the new self, which in [the likeness of] God has been created in righteousness and holiness of the truth.”  There Paul puts the operation of the spirit and mind together, laying aside the old self.  That is, he stops listening to the old man, and starts listening to the new man which is created in the truth, that is, God’s word.

God’s law is another way of referring to God’s word, which is God’s governing principles.  And the psalmist tells us that God’s law is the means by which we are given wisdom of the mind. Psalm 19:7-8 says “The law of the LORD is perfect, restoring the soul; The testimony of the LORD is sure, making wise the simple. The precepts of the LORD are right, rejoicing the heart; The commandment of the LORD is pure, enlightening the eyes.” 

The word of God is the means by which we are trained in righteousness, that our minds are transformed, so that we  might have success in our walk with God.  As it says in Joshua 1:8 “This book of the law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate on it day and night, so that you may be careful to do according to all that is written in it; for then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have success.”

Well, very quickly we must close.  In comprehending this war that is within his body and spirit, Paul cries out, “O wretched man that I am! Who will set me free from the body of this death?”  Notice he recognizes that it is the body that is the offensive thing here.  The Spirit give life. But the body leads to death.  And Paul yearns for the freedom from that body of sin that is still clinging to his soul. He finds himself despairing of this war within his being.  

But he gives us the  answer to that question in vs 25; “Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!”  Jesus Christ has set us free from the bondage of sin in the flesh. We are no longer under it’s dominion.  It still is there, crouching in wait for an opportunity, but by walking in the Spirit we will no longer be subject to the flesh. Gal 5:16 Paul says, “But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desire of the flesh.”

Paul concludes in vs 25, “So then, on the one hand I myself with my mind am serving the law of God, but on the other, with my flesh the law of sin.”  Paul can thank Jesus Christ that He has won the victory over sin and death and that as he is in Christ, then he too will overcome this body and death.  At the resurrection we will be raised with a new, incorruptible body, a body without the sin nature and all that turmoil that this present body causes our soul will be left behind.  Our salvation will be complete and final.  And we will live forever with the Lord in a world without sin and death, without sickness and sorrow.  Thanks be to God though our Lord Jesus Christ we have been saved from the penalty of sin, delivered from the power of sin, and at the resurrection we will be delivered from this body of sin.  That is our salvation, and it has been purchased by Jesus Christ, received as a gift of His grace by faith.  I trust that you have received Him as your Lord and Savior, that you have been born again as a new creature, old things have passed away, and all things have become new.

Gal 5:24-25 “Now those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires.  If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit.”

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, worship at the beach |

Sanctification by relationship, Romans 7:1-6

May

3

2020

thebeachfellowship

I would like to begin with a brief summary so far of what Paul has written to the Romans. The book of Romans is the Magna Carta of salvation. It’s kind of ironic, that most Christians think that salvation can be explained in a few sentences. Whereas, Paul writes 16 chapters in an epistle on the academic level of a dissertation for a Phd. All on the subject of salvation. We are entering our fifth month of studying this epistle, and we aren’t even half way through it yet.

Now concerning this subject of salvation, you should remember as I’ve told you many times, that salvation has three parts. Salvation is comprised of justification, sanctification and glorification. And for salvation to be complete, it must include all three. Justification is the removal of the penalty of sin. Sanctification is the removal of the power of sin. Glorification is the removal of the presence of sin. But before Paul can explain our salvation, he must first show that we need saving. So in the first 3 chapters, Paul spoke of condemnation. All have sinned and are under the condemnation of the law, which is the death penalty.

The antidote for condemnation is justification. Justification is the beginning of our salvation. It is being born again, transferred from the penalty of death to the gift of life. Justification, Paul said, came apart from the law. Justification did not come by keeping the law. Rather, it came by faith in what someone else did on our behalf. Christ, as our substitute, took our place in death that we might receive righteousness, or justification, through Him, by faith in Him.

Then, in chapter 6, Paul moves to the next phase of our salvation, which is sanctification. Beginning in ch 6 vs 1, Paul asks, now that we are justified, shall we continue in sin that grace may abound? The point he is speaking of is living in sin. And the answer he gives is a resounding “No.” God forbid! God has given us the power over sin, Paul says, so that we might no longer be under the control, or dominion of sin anymore.

First, Paul said that we have died to sin with Christ. And we have been raised with Christ to a new life. So we that have died to sin are now a new creation. Old things have passed away. As a result of being born again, we have a new nature, a new heart and as such we are not enslaved any longer to sin. So sanctification, the power over sin, is possible because we have a new life and the old man is dead.

And then Paul basically asks the question again but with a different emphasis. “Shall we sin because we are not under law but under grace?” The point of this question this time though isn’t can we live in sin, but can we occasionally dabble in sin because we have no condemnation under the law anymore. Again, the answer is negative; “may it never be.”

And to illustrate his point, he uses the analogy of a slave, something very familiar to the culture that he lived in. Basically, what Paul says is that once we were under the dominion of sin, enslaved to sin, but when we died in Christ, we no longer have an obligation to the old master which was sin anymore. We have a new master, which is righteousness. And so we aren’t obligated to obey the old master, but we obey our new master. 6:22 “But now having been freed from sin and enslaved to God, you derive your benefit, resulting in sanctification, and the outcome, eternal life.” Why would anyone want to go back to the old life of slavery to sin again? If you truly have been born again, you will not want to go back under sin’s domination again.

So as Proverbs says, as a man thinks in his heart, so is he. As the heart is changed then so will the actions of a man be changed. As we are imputed righteousness, so will that righteousness work itself out in a man’s actions. So sanctification starts in a change of heart.

Now when we get to chapter 7, Paul is going to change analogies once again. He turns form the analogy of slavery to the analogy of marriage. And maybe some of you out there might think that there is a connection between slavery and marriage more so than others. I hope that’s not the case, but I am afraid a lot of people in bad marriages don’t see much difference in the two.

But I really don’t think that was what was on Paul’s mind. I think instead what he wants to show is that our relationship to God while analogous to slavery, as seen in chapter 6, it is better illustrated as marriage. And I am sure that Paul has in mind here the ideal marriage. After all, if you are married to Christ, then you could have no better husband.

So, Paul uses the analogy of marriage to teach a principle. And in some ways the practical aspects of this principle are like the one used in the previous analogies. In all cases, the relationship changes because of a death. And such is the case here in this analogy.

The principle is stated in vs 1, “Or do you not know, brethren (for I am speaking to those who know the law), that the law has jurisdiction over a person as long as he lives?” The principle then is that one’s obligation to the law is until they die. Paul is saying that the law is made for man, but once a man dies, it has no jurisdiction over him any longer.

The word law can be given here it’s broadest meaning. Not necessarily Jewish law, though that would be included, but Roman or Greek also. Death ends all obligations, it breaks all bonds, and severs all ties. So when a person dies, he is dead to the law, thus free from it’s authority and released from it’s domination. We saw that illustrated in the slave analogy in chapter six.

But Paul wants to use a better analogy to illustrate this principle. And so he uses that of marriage. Let’s read how Paul illustrates it. Vs.2,3 “For the married woman is bound by law to her husband while he is living; but if her husband dies, she is released from the law concerning the husband. So then, if while her husband is living she is joined to another man, she shall be called an adulteress; but if her husband dies, she is free from the law, so that she is not an adulteress though she is joined to another man.”

So the apostle’s analogy then is illustrated by a man and woman who are married. He says the law has dominion over a man or a woman as long as their mate is living. But when their mate dies they are freed to be married to another. If the husband dies the woman is free to be married to another. She is no longer under the law of marriage. After his death she cannot be called an adulteress if she is married to another man.

Every now and then I conduct a wedding. I’m happy to say that I think all of the couples are still married today. God designed marriage to be for life. When I conduct a marriage ceremony I like to use the traditional vows; “I, John, take you, Mary, to be my lawfully wedded wife, to have and to hold, from this day forward, for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, until death do us part.” Notice, that marriage is lawful, that means under the law. And the marriage lasts until death. At which point, they are no longer together, nor is the marital bond still in effect. So the marriage does not continue after death.

Jesus said as such. He said that we will be like the angels in heaven, who neither marry nor are given in marriage. I remember the first year after my wife and I were married. My wife had not been saved very long. And when she found out that we would not be married in heaven I remember her asking me about it, and I thought that I saw tears in her eyes as she considered not being with me. Maybe it was my imagination. Or maybe it was tears of joy, I don’t know. Sometimes I can’t help but wonder if 30 years of marriage to me hasn’t changed her view on that a little. Her favorite prayer these days seems to be “even so Lord, come quickly!”

But there is a reason why God created marriage. It wasn’t something that man came up with. God was the one who said it wasn’t good for man to be alone. And so God made a help mate for Adam, and then he presented her to him. And at that point God said in scripture; “For this reason a man shall leave his father and his mother, and be joined to his wife; and they shall become one flesh.”

God views marriage so seriously because marriage is a picture of our relationship to God. God looked around the universe and all the galaxies that He has made and He found no one suitable as a help mate for Him. And so He formed man out of the dust of the earth in His likeness, in His image. He created humans to love Him, to have a relationship with Him, that He might be with them and that they might be one with Him. But man’s choice of sin destroyed that relationship. However, God had a plan to reconcile man to Himself, a plan of salvation, that we might be united forever with Him.

So in the illustration that Paul gives, the marriage is dissolved when the man dies. And when Christ died as our substitute, He died in the place of Adam, who was our representative man. Notice, Paul did not say here that the law died, but that the husband died. Christ became sin for us. He was the second Adam, in that He represents man, and took on our sin, and as He died, so vicariously we died with Him.

Now granted that is a rather complex analogy. Commentators have argued over the nuances of interpretation of this passage for centuries. But I believe we can understand the main point of it. The point is that death dissolves the marriage bond. And in the same way death dissolves the bondage to the law. The marriage bond is broken by the death of the husband. And in our case, the legal bond to the law is broken by the believer’s faith in Christ’s death on the cross, as we die through His death. Our old marriage is dead, and we have a new marriage to Christ.

Paul then in vs 4 gives us his application from this illustration. He says, “Therefore, my brethren, you also were made to die to the Law through the body of Christ, so that you might be joined to another, to Him who was raised from the dead, in order that we might bear fruit for God.”

There are a few important points we need to understand here. First, is found in the statement, “you also were made to die to the Law through the body of Christ.” It was through Christ’s death on the cross that we also died. That’s the grace of God in salvation. When you realize that the love of God for us did not require us to die for our sins, but He caused Christ to die in our place. That’s amazing. But we receive the full benefit as if we died with Him, so that our penalty to the law was paid in full.

The other point is revealed in the phrase, “so that you might belong to another, even to Him who was raised from the dead.” Our release from the bondage of the law means union with Christ. Our relationship to Christ is like the relationship of marriage. We belong to Christ now, a marriage based on grace, and no longer do we belong to the old marriage under the law.

Now just as in a marriage the consummation of the couple results in fruit, so does our union with Christ result in fruit for God. Paul says, “we might belong to another, in order that we might bear fruit for God.” It’s important that we understand what fruit refers to. Many preachers always seem to make fruit in connection with a harvest of souls. And that may be a part of it. But I think it is more likely that this refers to actions and attitudes and works and speech that are like Christ.

Gal 5:22-23 gives us an idea of what fruit looks like. “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law.” So the fruit of our union with Christ is our sanctification. It is our actions that are changed from works of sin to works of righteousness. The fruit of our union with Christ is that we have a new love, and so we do the things that are pleasing to Him. Because we love Him we keep His commandments. The fruit of our union is that we are being conformed to His image. That is the way our sanctification works, from the inside, out. We are changed on the inside by justification, given a new heart and a new nature, and being joined to Christ, and filled with His Spirit, we then bear the fruit what we have become. So fruit for God is our life of sanctification, or holiness.

Then Paul gives a final analysis of this fruit, born of our new relationship with Christ. He says in vs 5, “For while we were in the flesh, the sinful passions, which were [aroused] by the Law, were at work in the members of our body to bear fruit for death. But now we have been released from the Law, having died to that by which we were bound, so that we serve in newness of the Spirit and not in oldness of the letter.”

What Paul is saying is that when we were governed in our old Adamic nature by the lusts of the flesh, we were made even more aware of our sin because of the written law of God. Now we are going to talk further about how that works next week in the passage starting with verse 7, but for now I will just read a bit of it so that you might have a sense of what he is talking about. However, I will not comment on it now so that we won’t duplicate what we are going to talk about next week. But in regards to the way the law stimulated the old nature, he says in vs 7,”I would not have come to know sin except through the Law; for I would not have known about coveting if the Law had not said, ‘YOU SHALL NOT COVET.’ But sin, taking opportunity through the commandment, produced in me coveting of every kind.” So as we said last week, the law acts to magnify sin, to make it more apparent. And I think that is what Paul is indicating here.

But the main point Paul is reiterating here is that in our old nature we bore fruit for death. The only outcome of our sinful nature was that it produced even more sin, and sin produces death. The wages of sin is death, 6:23. But now, having died to that old man, we have been released from the law, just as the wife is released from her husband through death. And in this newness of life in Christ, in this new relationship of marriage with Christ, we serve in newness of the Spirit, no longer serving the old marriage under the law.

So in regards to fruit; our old relationship to Adam in our nature produced sinful fruit. The new relationship to the second Adam, Jesus Christ, produces righteous fruit. Thanks be to God that we are no longer married to our sinful nature. And so we are no longer under the condemnation of sin or the power of sin.

Now our sanctification is characterized by a willingness to serve God in newness of Spirit. That is the liberty that we have in this relationship. A new heart in a new marriage relationship with Christ, is based on love and not obligation. And so out of love we serve the Lord, trying to please Him, to be like Him, that we might be one with Him.

This is the way that Jeremiah 31:33 characterizes it; “But this is the covenant which I will make with the house of Israel after those days,” declares the LORD, “I will put My law within them and on their heart I will write it; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people.”

Sanctification is a process of dying to the old man, and living and walking in the Spirit. It starts with a new heart, with the imputed righteousness of Jesus Christ, and then it is a process of becoming more like Christ, of dying to sin, and living for righteousness. It’s a process that will not end until we are taken to be with the Lord. And then this body of death will finally be done away with forever and we will receive a new, glorified body. That is glorification, the final stage of our salvation. Sanctification is the middle phase. Between justification and glorification we are working out our salvation with fear and trembling, doing what is pleasing to the Lord, serving Him because we have a new spirit, being indwelled by the Holy Spirit who gives us the power to serve Him out of a new nature, a new heart, serving Him out of our love for Him as we draw near to Him, and He draws near to us.

John Newton, the famous preacher of the 18th century who was converted while a ship’s captain in the slave trade and gave up that life for a life serving the Lord, who went on to write Amazing Grace, said this about this intermediate state of sanctification. “I am not what I ought to be, I am not what I want to be, I am not what I hope to be in another world; but still I am not what I once used to be, and by the grace of God I am what I am.” What we are now is we have been called, we have been justified by the righteousness of Jesus Christ, we have been changed in our nature, we are being sanctified in the image of Christ, and one day we will be glorified in His presence forever when this body of sin is done away with.

I hope that this passage we have looked at today has revealed to you that the genuine Christian life is not that of bondage but of freedom. It’s a life that is not motivated by legal regulations but by love for Christ. It’s a life that is not spent pursing sinful passions that lead to death but walking after the Spirit which is life. And it is a life that does not bear fruit for death, but bears fruit for God, as we serve God with a glad and grateful heart.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, worship at the beach |

Slave or Free, Romans 6:15-23

Apr

26

2020

thebeachfellowship

As we continue in chapter 6 of Romans, we are considering the question hypothetically proposed by Paul in vs 1, “What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin so that grace may increase?”  The emphasis in that question is shall we continue in sin.  From this question which Paul answered with a resounding “NO” he establishes the principle that as a Christian, saved by grace, we cannot continue in sin.  We cannot live a lifestyle of sin.  We will not live in sin, even though it is true that as sin increases grace abounds all the more. 

And in the first 14 verses Paul supports that principle by showing that continuing in sin is incompatible because we died to sin and now have new life in Christ. We have died to sin. We have been united to Christ in His death, burial, and resurrection, and raised to newness of life. So we are a new creation, with a new life. The penalty for sin has been paid, and the power of sin has been broken, and we walk in a new life. We will not go on sinning so that grace may abound because we have died to sin, and we have a new life and a new nature.

But this is such an important principle that Paul doesn’t want to leave it at that.  And so he asks what seems to be basically the same question again in vs 15, “What then? Shall we sin because we are not under law but under grace?” And his answer is;  “May it never be!”

Now the question is fundamentally the same, but with a different emphasis. Many commentators believe that in this question, Paul is not asking can you continue in sin, or live in sin, but can you lapse into sin and still be considered ok because you are no longer under the law.  The answer is still the same – may it never be! Sin is still an offense to God.

But the premise of the question is also somewhat different. In this question, he asks, not just if we can sin while under grace, but rather, since we are not under law, can we sin? Now Paul previously explained the purpose of the law in chapter 5 vs 20 saying,  “The Law came in so that the transgression would increase; but where sin increased, grace abounded all the more.” The point made there was that the law did not save, but rather it convicted you of sin.  The law, Paul will say in Gal.3:24, is our tutor to show us to our need for a Savior.  The law, God’s standard of righteousness, only convicts us of sin, and magnifies our sin so that we might understand how sinful we are, and drive us to our need of a Savior.

So when Paul contrasts law and grace, he isn’t trying to show two ways of salvation; one from the Old Testament and one from the New Testament. Remember, he has already made the case that Abraham was saved by faith, not by the law.  But instead he is saying, that since you no longer have the condemnation of the law hanging over your head, convicting you as a sinner, but now you have been saved by grace through faith, are you now able to lapse back into sin and not have to worry about it.  Because, after all, the penalty has been done away with. Someone else has paid the fine, and since there can’t be double jeopardy, is it ok to sin? 

Well, the answer is still, may it never be! The goal of our salvation is that we might not sin, and that we would be delivered not only from the penalty of sin, but the power of it.  Now to illustrate his point, Paul turns to what would have been a familiar analogy to the church at Rome, especially in light of the culture that they lived in.  It is estimated that in Paul’s day, 30-40% of the population were slaves.  It’s very likely that even a larger percentage of the church at Rome were slaves.  And so Paul uses an analogy of slaves, or servants to illustrate this principle.

He says in vs16 “Do you not know that when you present yourselves to someone [as] slaves for obedience, you are slaves of the one whom you obey, either of sin resulting in death, or of obedience resulting in righteousness?”

The equivalent of that phrase “do you not know” is like saying, “Isn’t it obvious?”  So, Isn’t it obvious that when you present yourselves to someone as slaves for obedience, you are slaves of the one whom you obey?  Let’s just pause there for a moment.  You know, as bad as slavery was in those days, for some it was the only choice that they had.  Very often, people would voluntarily sell themselves into slavery, either because of no economic opportunity, or because they were an alien, or because they were in debt and it was either slavery or prison.  Now whether or not that is what Paul had in mind I’m not so sure, but the phrase that you present yourself to be a slave for obedience would indicate to me that something like that was possibly in the apostle’s thinking.  But regardless of how they became a slave, the idea is that a slave must obey the one who is his master.

Now the fact that he is using slavery as an analogy for obedience to sin or obedience to righteousness is evident from the context of that verse.  He says, “you are slaves of the one whom you obey, either of sin resulting in death, or of obedience resulting in righteousness?” 

So the point he is making is a believer cannot serve two masters. The Lord Jesus makes that very clear in the Gospel of Matthew. “No man can serve two masters for either he will hate the one and love the other or he will hold to the one and despise the other.” But he not only says that, he says in the next chapter in the 18th verse, “A good tree cannot bring forth bad fruit, neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit.” That’s why Paul then adds the fruit of sin or righteousness, saying,  “you are slaves of the one whom you obey, either of sin resulting in death, or of obedience resulting in righteousness.”

So we cannot obey sin anymore, because we have a new Master. Our allegiance, our new life, our identification is with our new representative Jesus Christ. We’ve been given a new nature, new ownership, belonging to a new Master, and consequently, we cannot serve sin any longer. 

The fact is, if your master is sin, then you’re going to obey sin. If your master is righteousness, then you’re going to obey righteousness. There are two families in the human race: people are either in Adam or they’re in Christ. They’re either under the reign of sin and death or they’re under the reign of righteousness and life. They’re either under the reign of iniquity or they’re under the reign of grace. There is no middle ground.

The sad truth concerning slavery is that if a person was born to a slave, he was by birth a slave. If a person was born to a free man, then he was by birth a free man.  So because of our forefather Adam who became a slave of sin, we who are born as descendants  of Adam are born as slaves, born into sin.  And the outcome of that slavery is death.  You’re serving someone, either sin or righteousness. 

I cannot help but think of the song by Bob Dylan that was popular a couple of decades ago.  It was called “You Gotta Serve Somebody.”  I’m not too confident about all of Dylan’s theology today, but he got that part right. The song lyrics said, “Well, it may be the devil or it may be the Lord, But you’re gonna have to serve somebody.”  You belong to one or the other.

Now as I said Paul is using the analogy of the slave market of his day. And a slave was responsible to obey his master all his life until death. But when he eventually died his obligation to his old master was gone. And so our obligation to our old master is now gone because we have in our representative died. We have been buried. We have been raised up together with Him to new life. Or we could apply the same analogy in a different way.  We could say here is a slave who is the servant of one master, but who is put on the auction block and sold to another master, and therefore, he is obligated to obey the other master and no longer required to obey any commands that the old master might extend to him. 

Likewise, our old master was sin. Jesus Himself said in John chapter 8: 34, “Whoever commits sin is the slave of sin.” And slavery to sin results in death.  And everyone, Paul has already established in the first three chapters, is a sinner.  Every man, woman and child is born in sin, under the dominion of sin.  The sin nature which we received from our forefather Adam instilled in us the corrupting principle of sin, that defiles all that we are and all that we do. There is none righteous, not even one. (Rom.3:10) So we were all born as slaves of sin. 

In vs17, Paul states that you “were” slaves of sin. Verse 20, you were slaves of sin. Again and again we are reminded that we were slaves of sin. Back in vs 6, the indication is that sin was our master. And the effect of sin is death, verse 21, the outcome of sin is death. And then in vs 23, “The wages of sin is death.” The whole human race is born into slavery to sin, with the ultimate outcome physical and spiritual death. Sin is like rampant cancer spreading to every organ of a body. It is incurable; it is terminal. And worse, physical death provides no relief. It only casts that sinful soul into an eternal death which is spiritual death.

Now in vs 17,  we find what the famous preacher Martyn Lloyd Jones calls one of the most important statements in all of this epistle, in that it tells us exactly what a Christian is. “But thanks be to God that though you were slaves of sin, you became obedient from the heart to that form of teaching to which you were committed, and having been freed from sin, you became slaves of righteousness.”  Lloyd Jones says this is a definition of what a Christian is. He’s a person that has obeyed from the heart the form of doctrine to which he was delivered.  He is no longer enslaved to sin, but a slave of righteousness.

The key to this transformation, Paul says, is obedience from the heart. It’s a change of heart resulting in obedience. And that is something that God does in you through His grace.  A change of heart results in a change of allegiance, and a change of allegiance results in a change of action.  Ezekiel 36:25-27 speaks to this divine transformation. ”Then I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you will be clean; I will cleanse you from all your filthiness and from all your idols. Moreover, I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; and I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh. I will put My Spirit within you and cause you to walk in My statutes, and you will be careful to observe My ordinances.”

And that same change of heart resulting in obedience is spoken of in Jeremiah 31:33 “But this [shall be] the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel; After those days, saith the LORD, I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts; and will be their God, and they shall be my people.” 

There is another important principle which Paul makes in that verse, and that is our obedience is from the heart to the form of teaching to which you were committed.  And the interesting word in that statement is the word translated as “form.” That word in the original Greek is “typos” which means a die or a mold. The picture is that of a mold which is made by the teaching of the gospel, into which we are poured into, so that we might be shaped or formed into the image of Christ. It’s a very beautiful word picture of how the preaching of the word conforms us to the image of Jesus Christ.  And that conforming that occurs reshapes us from the old man to the new man.  As 1Cor. 15:49 says, “And as we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly.”

And verse 18 describes that new condition, then, as having been freed from the power of sin. “Having been freed from sin, you became slaves of righteousness.” You have been purchased by a new Master.  You have been set free from the dominion of sin, from the enslavement to sin, from the power of sin over you.  Now, we are now under the dominion of righteousness.  We are servants of righteousness. Because of a change of heart, we have a love for God, and out of that love we are obedient to righteousness. 

Then in vs 19, Paul says that because of the weakness of our human condition, because we cannot comprehend spiritual things as we ought to, he is using a physical analogy to teach a spiritual principle. Vs19 “I am speaking in human terms because of the weakness of your flesh. For just as you presented your members as slaves to impurity and to lawlessness, resulting in [further] lawlessness, so now present your members as slaves to righteousness, resulting in sanctification.” 

To present means to give, to yield.  And that indicates a willingness on our part.  In the old nature, we willingly presented our bodies to sin because we loved evil.  And we were enslaved by our affections and our passions.  But now that we have a change of heart, a change of loves, we are no longer compelled to serve sin.  It’s possible to willingly return to sin, but the point is that we do not have to serve sin any longer.  If we do serve sin, it’s going to be because we want to do it, not because we have to do it.

And so in that change of nature is our freedom from sin.  When we sin, Paul said, it always results in more sin, and more sin.  It’s the nature of sin to spread, to multiply, to consume, to corrupt completely.  But in the opposite of sin, when we respond to righteousness, it in turn leads to holiness, or what Paul calls sanctification.  Sanctification is simply becoming less sinful, and more holy in our behavior.  It is a process where God works in us the fruit of righteousness.  He planted, so to speak, righteousness in us through justification, and He reaps righteousness in us through the process of sanctification.  The process in which we become molded more like Christ as we die to the old nature, and out of our new nature  serve Christ from the heart.

And as a further incentive to serve the Lord, he says in vs 20, “For when you were slaves of sin, you were free in regard to righteousness. Therefore what benefit were you then deriving from the things of which you are now ashamed? For the outcome of those things is death.”   What that means is that when we were enslaved to sin, we had no claim to righteousness, but only the fruit of death. So what was the benefit of our life of sin?  I will confess that when I lived in sin at a young age, kind of in a prodigal son type of existence, I thought I was doing these cool things which even though I knew were wrong, I saw them as kind of marks of manhood, or marks of achievement that I could brag about later.  But I can tell you now from the vantage point of maturity, there is practically nothing that I did during those years that I am not ashamed of today.  In fact, I look back on much of my life and I am so ashamed.  There was no benefit, only shame, only emotional and physical scars on both myself and on others that I hurt.

And what Paul is saying, is from a believer’s perspective, as you look back on your life before you were saved, why would you ever want to go back to that for even a second?  Especially knowing the progressive nature of sin, that one little sin leads to another, and another, until you are completely corrupted, and the ultimate end of it is death.

Vs. 22 “But now having been freed from sin and enslaved to God, you derive your benefit, resulting in sanctification, and the outcome, eternal life.”  Listen, there is great benefit from sanctification. To be sanctified means to be set apart for good works. And there is a blessing and a reward that is promised for our service to the Lord. There is a peace that passes all understanding in knowing that you are right with God.  There are inherent blessings in following the Lord, and there are certainly future blessings from a life lived for God, as we enter into our reward in eternal life.

But Paul doesn’t equate godliness with an easy life. The life of a slave or a servant is sometimes trying.  It means that we sometimes have to give up our way for His way, give up our priorities for His priorities.  But the benefits to serving the Lord are an eternal, everlasting inheritance which cannot be taken away.  In Rom 8:16-18 Paul says, “The Spirit Himself testifies with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with [Him] so that we may also be glorified with [Him.]  For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is to be revealed to us.”

So Paul clearly presents a choice for every man.  To live for sin and reap the reward which is death.  Or to live for the Lord and receive the gift of eternal life. Romans 6:23 “For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” Consider the outcome of your life.  If you live for yourself, if you live for sin, then you will get your wages.  And your wages which you earned is death.  But if you live for the Lord, then you are given life.  You could never earn eternal life and all that is encapsulated in that promise.  But God is gracious to give us eternal life if we present ourselves to Him to be His servants.

Given all that Christ has done for us by dying in our place as the price for our sin, given all that God has given us in a new life, the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, and inheritance as co heirs of Christ, how could we ever return to the enslavement of sin?  How could we ever spurn the grace that God has given us, for the temporary, fleeting pleasure of sin that though it may look appealing for a moment, will put us back on the path of misery and death. 

Paul has spoken three times in this text about presenting yourselves, presenting your members.  And in Romans 12:1,2 he speaks still further about the need to regularly present ourselves to God and not be conformed to this world  And we do that by continually renewing the mind by the washing of the word of God that we might not sin against Him.  Romans 12:1,2, Romans 12:1-2 “Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, [which is] your spiritual service of worship.  And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.”  

I urge you, to present your bodies to the Lord which is your spiritual service.  The benefits are eternal.  May God help us to leave behind the way of sin and to live as the free men and women God has made us to be. As Paul said in Galatians 5:1: “It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of bondage,” (Galatians 5:1). You have been freed from the slave market; now walk as new men. This is Paul’s exhortation to us.  I pray that you will be conformed to this gospel.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, worship on the beach |

Dead to sin, alive in Christ, Romans 6:1-14

Apr

19

2020

thebeachfellowship

Have you ever let your imagination run wild and thought what it would be like to rob a bank and get away with it? No? I guess I am the only one with a criminal bent among us. But let’s just say I could guarantee that you would never get caught, could you imagine robbing a bank of millions of dollars?

Well, such a prospect might be more tempting for some of us more so than for others, but I would hope that most of you would never do such a thing, even if you knew you could get away with it.  But maybe robbing a bank is too much to consider.  Let’s just drop the severity of the crime down to, say, just a common sin.  Maybe something that wouldn’t get you arrested, but nevertheless something that you know is wrong. How about a little white lie? How about lusting after a woman? How about cheating on an exam?  How about hating someone?

The question is, if you know that you aren’t going to be caught, and take that a step further and say you don’t think that God is going to hold you accountable – because, after all, you’re under grace and not the law – would you go ahead and sin?  I’m afraid that if we are honest with ourselves, many of us might have to say, not only might I do such a thing, I probably already have done so on more than one occasion.

But let’s suppose you have done something that you know is a sin.  The question might be asked, so what?  Or you might even ask the question, why not?  After all, Paul has already established that as Christians we are not under the law, nor the penalty of the law, but we are under grace. So there is no condemnation to those under grace.  Furthermore, we might argue that grace glorifies God because it shows that our salvation is not because of how righteous we are, or how much good we might do, but grace glorifies the love of God, the goodness of God. 

So you might even go so far as to justify your sin by saying that your sinfulness demonstrates the grace of God and therefore glorifies God.  After all, Paul said in 5:20 that where sin increased, grace abounded more.  So unfortunately, for some of us, this isn’t a merely theoretical question.  We have already willfully sinned so that grace might abound. We don’t worry about condemnation because Romans 8:1 says there is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.  We don’t worry about divine discipline because Paul said that where sin increases grace abounds more.  So the more I sin, the more grace God bestows on me.

Now Paul is saying in this passage that kind of thinking is counter to the doctrine of salvation. And as a means of disputing that kind of twisted logic, Paul asks the rhetorical question, “Shall we go on sinning that grace may increase?”  In asking this question Paul isn’t denying that there will be no sin in a Christian’s life.  There will be sin occurring in a Christians life as long as he is in the body.  John said in 1John 1:8 “If we say that we have no sin, we are deceiving ourselves and the truth is not in us.”  So Paul isn’t saying that Christians will never sin.

But what he is questioning is the attitude that accommodates sin, that says, “I don’t need to be concerned about sin, and in fact I can deliberately practice sin without being worried about it, because increasing sin causes more grace to abound, and grace glorifies God.”

And we know that such thinking was  prevalent in some circles in the early church because Jude said in vs 4, that certain individuals had crept into the church and turned the doctrine of grace into a license to sin.

So to answer his own rhetorical question, Paul gives an emphatic “No!”  He says, “God forbid!” The very suggestion that the end justifies the means is abhorrent to Paul.  And he equates such thinking as being as incompressible as having died to sin, and then living in it.  He is likening someone who has died from a terrible, corrupting disease and then being brought back to life, only to continue to live in the corrupted filth which caused the disease in the first place.

Peter speaks of the same principle using the analogy of animals.  He says in 2Peter  2:22  “It has happened to them according to the true proverb, “A DOG RETURNS TO ITS OWN VOMIT,” and, “A sow, after washing, [returns] to wallowing in the mire.”  I can tell you as someone speaking from experience, someone who has a couple of dogs, that nothing will make you lose your own lunch quicker than watching your dog throw up, and then go back over to it and try to eat it.  I get sick thinking of it.  But Peter uses such a disgusting analogy in order to explain how abhorrent it is to return to sin when you have been delivered from it.  The idea that a Christian would voluntarily give opportunity to sin to operate produces a revulsion in Paul, as it should in us.

So the better question is not should you sin that grace may abound, but how can we live in sin when we have died to sin?  What that question teaches us is that in Christ we have died to sin. Remember in the last chapter we talked about the representative man?  That we were all once under the representative man who was Adam according the flesh, and suffered the sin nature and the condemnation of death as a result of our relationship with him.  But then Paul showed that Christ is the second Adam, and by faith we can change our allegiance and identify with Christ, who died on the cross for us as our substitute so that we might have life.  

The principle then is that as Christ our representative died for sin, so we too die to sin.  Our conversion comes as a result of faith in what Christ did – dying on the cross for our sin as our substitute.  And as we believe that, and trust in the efficacy of what He did, we too die to the old man, we die to sin vicariously with Christ.  Listen folks, this is why I emphasize again and again that repentance is necessary for salvation. Repentance is dying to sin.  Repentance is nothing less than realizing the awfulness of our sin, and realizing that our life in sin needs to pass away. Repentance is turning away.  It is a desire to change, to do a 180, to leave the way in which we were living, to turn to God for a new beginning.  We need to be wiling to renounce sin, to let go of sin, to die to it, to change, to be converted.  Asking God to make me a new person, to give me a new life because the old man resulted in death.

The problem is that I’m afraid many of us have not truly repented of sin. We may have reached a place where we want out of the predicament that we are in.  We may want God to help us get out of the crisis that we have ended up in.  And so perhaps we call on God, or turn to God, or pray to God for help.  And maybe God does help us get through that crisis.  But maybe also we have never repented of our sin. Maybe we have never recognized how really sinful we were, and that no matter what I have to give up, no matter what I have to let die, it is worth it, and it is even necessary, if I am to have new life.

I’m afraid a lot of the church is like Israel after God delivered them from slavery in Egypt and brought them out into the wilderness to travel towards the promised land of Canaan. But they weren’t many days out of Egypt and Exodus records them whining about how much they missed the delicacies of Egypt.  And it wasn’t long until they even were thinking about how they could return to slavery in order to feed their desires.  Unthinkable, and yet such is the nature of sin that is not repented of.

In 1Cor. 10:1-6 it says concerning Israel in those days, “For I do not want you to be unaware, brethren, that our fathers were all under the cloud and all passed through the sea;  and all were baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the sea;  and all ate the same spiritual food;  and all drank the same spiritual drink, for they were drinking from a spiritual rock which followed them; and the rock was Christ.  Nevertheless, with most of them God was not well-pleased; for they were laid low in the wilderness.  Now these things happened as examples for us, so that we would not crave evil things as they also craved.”

Now the analogy to what we are talking about today should be obvious. But there is something else I want to point out to you that parallels this passage we are looking at today.  Notice it says, “they all were baptized into Moses.” Obviously Moses did not baptize the Israelites, so what is he talking about?  He is using baptism as a metaphor for identification with Moses. That is a primary function of the ordinance of baptism.  In baptism we publicly identify with Christ.  And in light of what Paul has said about Christ being our new representative man, to whom we have allegiance by faith, then I think it makes vs 3 of our text more clear.  

Vs3, “Or do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus have been baptized into His death? Therefore we have been buried with Him through baptism into death, so that as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, so we too might walk in newness of life.”

So in light of the relation to baptism as being identified with someone, whether Moses or Christ, Paul says that to be baptized into Christ is to be brought into identification with Christ.  To be brought into a personal relationship with Christ.  And to be baptized into Christ is to be baptized, or identified with His death.

Now I hope that you have all been baptized.  But the ordinance of baptism is not so much being taught here as it is being used as a metaphor for our relationship to Christ by identification as our representative.  And by extension, we identify with Christ’s death. But also, the very act of baptism illustrates the necessity of death.  Paul says, “you have been baptized into His death.” When you are lowered into the water in baptism, you are in effect saying that I die to the old man, being buried with Him in death, and then being raised to newness of life in Him. When you recognize the horror of your sin, the inherent death that sin causes, then certainly you agree with Christ that there needs to be the death of sin.

So Paul speaks to that reality of dying with Christ in Galatians 2:20 saying, “I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ lives in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me.”

Now for those that are crucified with Christ, who have become united with Him in death, Paul says in vs5 they shall also be united with Him in a resurrection like His. Vs 5 “For if we have become united with [Him] in the likeness of His death, certainly we shall also be [in the likeness] of His resurrection,  knowing this, that our old self was crucified with [Him,] in order that our body of sin might be done away with, so that we would no longer be slaves to sin;  for he who has died is freed from sin.

So the point is that if we have died with Christ, then we shall live with Christ. Paul isn’t talking about the resurrection of the body here which is to come at the end of the age.  But he is saying that if you die with Him you will also be empowered to live with Him. He is talking about the new life that comes as a result of our conversion.  He is speaking of a likeness of the resurrection, that is, we that die to sin are raised to live a new life, empowered by the Holy Spirit. 

Instead of wallowing in sin in order that grace may abound, we are washed, we are cleansed, we are dressed in righteousness, and we are empowered by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit so that we might live as He lives.  Listen, dying to sin and being justified by grace results in a transformation.  We are transformed from death to life.  We are transformed from sinners to saints. We are changed from slaves to sin to servants of righteousness.  

Let’s go back to Galatians 2:20 again for a moment:  “I have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the [life] which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself up for me.”  Because I die to sin, I am crucified with Christ, therefore I am made alive by faith in His life, and I am changed from the old man to a new man, from allegiance to Adam to allegiance to Christ.  So by faith we receive the righteousness of Christ, the life of Christ, the mind of Christ, the Spirit of Christ, the inheritance of Christ, and even the body of Christ when we are glorified on that day when we shall see Him and be like Him.

That great and awesome reality of new life is stated succinctly in vs 8,9; “Now if we have died with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with Him,  knowing that Christ, having been raised from the dead, is never to die again; death no longer is master over Him.”  Christ in His death died for sin.  But in His resurrection He triumphed over sin and death.  And because He is my representative, He establishes the same reality for me.  Death has no hold over me because sin has lost it’s grip on me.  Because He lives, I have power over sin and death, because He has conquered sin and death.  

Let me try to illustrate that idea of a representative man again with a familiar story.  It’s the story of David and Goliath.  Goliath was the dread champion of the Philistine army.  And every day he came out and challenged Israel to send a man to fight him, and the result of their battle would determine the outcome of the larger battle between Israel and the Philistines.  David, you will remember, upon visiting his brothers heard the giant give that challenge.  And in the power of God he went out to meet the giant on the field of battle and slew him.  And then all the Philistines fled before Israel, as the Israeli army chased them and defeated the Philistines.  Now that is a picture of the representative man.  David is a type of Christ, who defeated the enemy so that we might have victory over sin through Him. He represented us, and we achieved victory through Him.

Now those are the principles or doctrines of being dead to sin and the new life that we have in Christ.  Paul then adds to the doctrine exhortation in the last four verses of this passage.  Exhortation simply means emphatically urging someone to do something.  He has given us the reasons why we should, now he exhorts us to make sure we do so.

He gives us three exhortations by way of application.  First, he says in vs11, “Even so consider yourselves to be dead to sin, but alive to God in Christ Jesus.”  The key word there is consider.  To consider is to think, to contemplate.  Sin starts in the mind.  It starts with an attitude. We must constantly bear in mind that we are not what we used to be.  We must constantly remember that sin leads to death.  And we have died to sin so that we might live to Christ.  Don’t let the devil tempt you to go back to the slavery of Egypt because he makes it seem like the old sin wasn’t really that bad.  I don’t know how many millions of people have gone back to drinking or drugs because they started thinking that I could have a couple and it won’t hurt me.  I know that I used to be addicted and it caused me a lot of problems.  But I can just have a little bit and it won’t hurt me. That’s a lie from hell and it will drag you back into depravity and death.  Sin starts in the mind.

Second exhortation is in vs 12; “Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body so that you obey its lusts.”  The key there is sin reigns. If the devil is able to find a chink in your armor, no matter how small, then he will continue to exploit that opening.  It’s like a boxer who recognizes his opponent is weak in his stomach, and so he continually jabs the same weak spot, again and again until he is able to defeat you.

As I said earlier, Paul isn’t saying that as a Christian you will never sin.  But it’s another thing to give into it, and let sin rule in your life.  It’s another thing to go back to the enslavement to sin.  It’s another thing to surrender to sin. The author of Hebrews says in Hebrews 12:4 “You have not yet resisted to the point of shedding blood in your striving against sin.”  There is a battle in your body, in your members, between sin and godliness.  And we are to put sin to death even as Jesus Christ shed His blood in His battle against sin.  Don’t let sin have it’s way.  Guard against any encroachment.  As Psalms 119:11 says, hide the word of God in your heart that you might not sin.  And if you sin, confess your sin immediately, repent of it and ask God to cleanse you from it.  Don’t surrender to it.  Don’t wallow in it.

The third exhortation is in vs13; “and do not go on presenting the members of your body to sin [as] instruments of unrighteousness; but present yourselves to God as those alive from the dead, and your members [as] instruments of righteousness to God.”  What he means is stop putting the parts of your bodies at the disposal of sin, but instead present your bodies to Him to be used as weapons of righteousness.

I think Romans 12:1,2 speaks to this very clearly; “Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, [which is] your spiritual service of worship. And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.”  Instead of presenting your body to sin, and letting the your bodies be conformed to the world’s ideas and passions and way of thinking, he says instead present your bodies to God. 

I really think that verse is an injunction to go to church, in person, in the body.  That verse is one of the reasons that I feel so strongly that church cannot be done effectively online.  I don’t doubt that good things can be accomplished through an online study or online preaching.  But there is something about presenting your physical body to the Lord in the assembly of other believers.  It is the means God uses to conform you to the image of Jesus Christ.  The church is His body, and that body is spiritual, but it is also physical.  And the temptations of sin are those which for the most part are done in the body.  And so the discipline of putting yourself under the authority of the church, presenting your body to the Lord, to be held accountable to the other members of the body, and to be conformed to Christ by the preaching of the word is something that cannot be accomplished any other way.  The physical, local church is God’s blueprint for the sanctification of the saints and nothing else can be substituted for God’s plan with anywhere near the same degree of success.  Paul says if you want to be free from sin, then offer your body to God.  And that is done in the assembly of Christ’s church.

Sin starts in the mind, but it bears fruit in the body. Die to sin while it is still in the mind and it will never get acted out in the body.  And the way to die to sin in the mind is to be transformed by the renewing of the mind, so that as the word of God cleanses and informs you you are no longer conformed to the world, but conformed to God.

Finally, Paul gives an assurance.  He has given us the doctrines, the principles of our sanctification.  He has given us three exhortations to be sanctified.  And now he gives us the assurance that we are being sanctified in vs 14, “For sin shall not be master over you, for you are not under law but under grace.”

If you know these things, if you consider and contemplate on these things and then if you put these things into practice, then sin will not rule over you.  Sin’s reign over you will be broken.  You are not under law, not the judgment of the law nor the condemnation of the law, because thank God you are under grace.  

Paul answers that question he started with; what then, shall we continue in sin that grace may abound. And the answer is no, God forbid, for we are not under the law, but we are under grace.  And the demands of grace are even more binding upon me when I consider all that Jesus has done for me, than the law which I never could accomplish.  So rather than grace being a license to sin, it should be the means of liberation from sin, and liberty to live as Christ lives in me, empowering me through His Spirit.

I trust that you have truly been converted today from the old man to the new man.  I trust that you have repented of your sin and died to sin so that you have been given new life in Jesus Christ.  Salvation is not just an intellectual assent to the facts of Christianity.  But salvation is a supernatural transformation that God accomplishes in the heart and mind of a man or woman.  If that transformation has not happened in your life then I urge you today to call upon the Lord and ask Him to save you, to forgive you, to change you and remake you and give you life.  He will not turn you away, for His purpose in dying on the cross was to save sinners.  

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church at the beach, worship on the beach |

Much More, Romans 5: 12-21

Apr

12

2020

thebeachfellowship

First of all, let me begin this morning by making a few remarks about Easter. After all, today is the holiday we know as Easter and it’s important that we know why we observe it. Easter is a celebration of the resurrection of Jesus Christ. which many believe was on this date, or close to this date. But what some may not realize is that we celebrate the resurrection of Christ every Sunday morning.  The Sabbath was discontinued as a Christian observance on the first day that Jesus rose from the dead.  Contrary to some misinformation out there, Sunday service was not instituted by the Emperor Constantine around 300 AD.  It was instituted in the first century at the time of the resurrection, and it was called the Lord’s Day.  Consequently, as Christians, we do not observe the Sabbath, but we observe the Lord’s Day, which is Sunday, the day that Jesus rose from the dead.  And you should be very glad we do not try to hold onto any part of the Sabbath laws.  

So while I certainly appreciate that traditionally this day has been appointed to be celebrated as  Easter, to remember the Lord’s resurrection, I would also point out that we already celebrate it 52 Sundays of the year.  That is the reason the church began to meet on Sunday instead of Saturday, and we have been continuing that for 1990 years or so.

Secondly, let me remind you of why Christ’s resurrection is important. We studied this passage a couple of weeks ago, but perhaps you could use a refresher. Romans 4:25 tells us  “[Christ] who was delivered over because of our transgressions, and was raised because of our justification.” So His resurrection was because of our justification?  “Now wait a minute,” you might say, “Romans 5:9 which we looked at last week said we were justified by His blood. So which is it, are we justified by His blood or by His resurrection?” 

The answer is we are justified by His blood, but His blood was verified and validated as sufficient to pay the price of our justification by the fact that God resurrected Him from the grave.  So God raised Him, 4:25 says, because of our justification.  Because Christ’s sacrifice was considered sufficient for the sin of the world, because His righteousness was considered sufficient God resurrected Him from the grave.  And I would say to both of those points, that his sacrifice and his righteousness was considered “much more” than sufficient.  So Christ’s resurrection is proof that we are justified by His sacrifice.

And futher more we celebrate His resurrection because  His resurrected life is the power of our resurrected life. Because He lives, we shall live. Because He is our representative, because He is the first fruits of the resurrection, we too shall live.  Not only spiritually made alive, but physically our body will be resurrected to new life at His coming.  And so because He lives we live.  We that are Christians by faith in Christ shall never die, but we shall be raised at the resurrection with a new glorified body.  And I should emphasize that fact should characterize our life.  Especially in light of the fear of death that we see spread throughout the world because of this Corona virus, Christians should stand out from the world because we have no fear of death. Because Jesus lives, we know that we will never die, but our spirit will live forever, and our body will be resurrected when Christ returns for His church.

Not only that we will one day experience the resurrection from the dead at His coming, but the power to live now a new life is available because He lives. As Paul says in 5:10, “much more, having been reconciled, we shall be saved by His life.” So the fact that He lives guarantees our salvation. As Heb 7:25 says, “Therefore He is able also to save forever those who draw near to God through Him, since He always lives to make intercession for them.”  And much more than that, because He ascended to the Father, He has sent to dwell in us His Spirit, who is able to give us power from on high to live this new life. If He had not risen, we would not have the Spirit indwelling us with power.

So that is the significance of Easter.  And as I said, we celebrate His resurrection every Sunday, not just today.  But as important as that is, Jesus did not command us to celebrate His resurrection, per se, but to celebrate His death.  On the night before His crucifixion, as He ate the Passover with His disciples, He terminated the observance of the Passover and instituted the Lord’s Supper, which He said commemorated His death.  And He said as often as you do this, do it in remembrance of Me. And I want to use that as an segue to plug our Wednesday night service this coming week.  We are studying 1 Cor. 11 and this week we will be looking at Paul’s instructions concerning the Lord’s Supper.  There seems to be a lot of confusion lately about the Lord’s Supper and about it’s predecessor, the Passover.  And so we will be looking at that in depth this Wednesday night. I would encourage you to join us online for that time together to see what God has to say about this ordinance of the church.

Now as we look at the passage before us today, we see that Paul uses the expression “much more,” again and again to describe the benefits of our justification.  And that is the title of my message today; “Much More.”  Paul uses this expression “much more” repeatedly in this passage to describe to us the immeasurable grace that God has bestowed upon us because of our justification which was purchased by Christ.  Paul has painted a dark picture in the first few chapters we have looked at so far, describing the condition of sin in the world and the death and condemnation that comes to all men because all have sinned.  But now in chapter 5, Paul breaks out into a series of exultations at the surpassing greatness of God’s grace which has been poured out to us who have trusted in Him.

And Paul does so by comparing the darkness and despair of sin with the abundant grace and hope of the gospel, and by expressing that contrast again and again with the expression, “much more.”  The first “much more” we find in last week’s passage, vs 8,9 “But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.  MUCH MORE then, having now been justified by His blood, we shall be saved from the wrath [of God] through Him.”

The second is found in vs10; “For if while we were enemies we were reconciled to God through the death of His Son, MUCH MORE, having been reconciled, we shall be saved by His life.”

The third reference is in vs15 “But the free gift is not like the transgression. For if by the transgression of the one the many died, MUCH MORE did the grace of God and the gift by the grace of the one Man, Jesus Christ, abound to the many.”

The fourth reference is in vs 17; “For if by the transgression of the one, death reigned through the one, MUCH MORE those who receive the abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness will reign in life through the One, Jesus Christ.

And the fifth reference is in vs 20 as translated in the KJV; “Moreover the law entered, that the offense might abound. But where sin abounded, grace did much more abound.” 

Now this list of contrasts could be expanded even further if we did not restrict ourselves to the literal expression “much more,” but took into account where it is indicated in other verses.  And what Paul wants to illustrate here in this passage might be called  a representative style of government.  We have a representative style of government in the United States. You often hear that we have a democracy.  But more specifically we have a Republic.  And in a Republic government there is a representative which is suppose to represent the people.  And in a similar sense, in God’s government we have a representative government.  And Paul is going to illustrate this system of representation as the heads of two parties, to show these principles of our salvation by contrast.  So Paul uses what he called a type who is the representative of the natural man which he compares to the representative head of the spiritual man. 

And the type or anti type he uses is Adam, who of course you will remember from the Genesis account. Adam was the first man, and Paul indicates here that as such he is the representative man. He is the head of the human race. And Adam is both a type and an anti type of Christ. Notice in vs 14, it says “Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adam’s transgression, who is a type, (that means a figure or foreshadowing) of him that was to come.”  So Adam is a type of Christ in the sense that he is the head or representative man of the human race, the natural man.

Now the counter part to that type is found in 1 Cor.15:45, which says this concerning Christ; “So also it is written, “The first MAN, Adam, BECAME A LIVING SOUL.” The last Adam [became] a life-giving spirit. … 47 The first man is from the earth, earthy; the second man is from heaven. … 49 Just as we have borne the image of the earthy, we will also bear the image of the heavenly.”  Christ then is the head of the heavenly man, or the spiritual man.  And as such He is called the second Adam, confirming that Adam is a type of Christ.

So then following this “much more” metaphor, let’s look at these principles according to the contrasting parallel of Adam to Christ.  I have tried to put them on a chart which I hope will help you to see it more clearly as we work through this passage.  

Under Adam as our representative man, Paul says sin came through him. vs 12, “Wherefore, just as through one man sin entered the world…. “ That one man is Adam.Those who have been born since Adam inherited their sinful nature from him. The Bible teaches that as Adam sinned, all sinned.  As the corruption of sin spread in him, it was imputed to all men who inherited his nature.  And our sinful nature is evidenced by our personal sin. That is our natural condition.

But by faith, we are able to have our government changed.  By faith in Christ, we come under the headship of Christ as our representative, and so we see that where sin abounded, grace abounded much more. Vs 15, “For if by the transgression of the one the many died, much more did the grace of God and the gift by the grace of the one Man, Jesus Christ, abound to the many.” If we inherit sin on the basis of our representative Adam, then we inherit grace on the basis of our representative Christ.

Paul goes on to say in vs 12, in regards to Adam, as our representative man, that through him sin entered the world, and death through sin and so death passed to all men.  As we are like Adam in sin, so we are like Adam in death.  We received the condemnation of death that was given to Adam.  And that process of dying began immediately when Adam sinned, and the condemnation of death began immediately with us.  Paul says this condemnation of death was passed to us because all sinned.  

But in contrast, under our representative Christ there is no imputed sin because it is taken away in Christ.  And in exchange for our faith, there is imputed to us His righteousness. Paul speaks in chapter 4 vs 20 of Abraham who “did not waver at the promise of God through unbelief; but was strong in faith, giving glory to God;  And being fully persuaded that, what he had promised, he was able also to perform.  And therefore it was imputed to him for righteousness. Now it was not written for his sake alone, that it was imputed to him; But for us also, to whom it shall be imputed, if we believe on him that raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead.” So through Christ our representative is imputed righteousness.

The next contrast that Paul makes is that from Adam, death reigned. Sin was in the world even before the law was given, as evidenced by the fact that sin’s punishment, which is death,  reigned from Adam to Moses. vs.14 “Nevertheless death reigned from Adam until Moses, even over those who had not sinned in the likeness of the offense of Adam, who is a type of Him who was to come.”  Even though men had not sinned the same sin of Adam, yet they still broke the unwritten law of God and they lived under the government, the reign of death as a consequence of their allegiance to sin.

So Adam was a type, Paul says, of the One who was to come, Jesus Christ. From Adam came the enslavement to sin of the entire human race, and from Christ comes the salvation of all who come to Him in faith. Vs. 15 “But the free gift is not like the transgression. For if by the transgression of the one the many died, much more did the grace of God and the gift by the grace of the one Man, Jesus Christ, abound to the many.”

So sin, Paul says,  was not equal to grace.  Grace is much more effective than sin. Through the sin of Adam many died.  And notice how Paul ties the sin with the punishment of death. “by the transgression of the one the many died…” The death that Paul refers to is first physical, and then spiritual/eternal. As Paul says in Romans 6:23, “For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” 

Our Lord is a title of government, our representative. So in contrast to the sin of Adam, much more does the grace of God through Jesus Christ overflow to the many. Vs. 16 says, “The gift is not like [that which came] through the one who sinned; for on the one hand the judgment [arose] from one [transgression] resulting in condemnation, but on the other hand the free gift [arose] from many transgressions resulting in justification.”

So through Adam’s one sin came judgment upon all men, but in Christ,  through His one sacrifice for many sins, comes grace resulting in justification for all who believe in Him. That’s the amazing thing about Christ’s sacrifice.  It was once for all, and sufficient for all, and for all the sins of all men.  And that is why His resurrection is so important.  It was proof that Christ’s righteousness and His sacrifice was sufficient, and much more so.

Now in vs 17, Paul returns to the contrast of death and life as illustrated in each representative.

Vs17 “For if by the transgression of the one, death reigned through the one, much more those who receive the abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness will reign in life through the One, Jesus Christ.  So then as through one transgression there resulted condemnation to all men, even so through one act of righteousness there resulted justification of life to all men.”

The contrast is presented as a dominion, a reign, a government if you will; from Adam, came sin, which was commuted to all men, and death reigned because of sin. So from one transgression came the dominion of sin and death for all. But in Christ we have so much more.  Through the One, came the gift of righteousness, and through one act of righteousness came justification resulting in the dominion of righteousness and life for all who believe. And again, that justification for all is only possible because of the surpassing value of His life.  Through Christ, we were transferred from the dominion of darkness to the dominion of light. Col.1:13 says, “For He rescued us from the domain of darkness, and transferred us to the kingdom of His beloved Son.”  And in that dominion we have everlasting life.

The next contrast between Adam and Christ is that of disobedience versus obedience.  Look at vs19 “For as through the one man’s disobedience the many were made sinners, even so through the obedience of the One the many will be made righteous.”

Adam’s disobedience caused many to be made sinners.  Sin is disobedience against God’s law.  And Adam’s disobedience was passed on by progeny to his descendants, resulting in their sinfulness. But as tragic as that is, much more does Christ’s obedience benefit us by righteousness.  Much more does the obedience of Christ mean that many will be made righteous.  

Now in terms of Christ’s obedience you should remember that we talked about Christ being submissive to the Father last Wednesday night in our Bible study.  Remember in Phil. 2:5-8 it says, “Have this attitude in yourselves which was also in Christ Jesus,  who, although He existed in the form of God, did not regard equality with God a thing to be grasped,  but emptied Himself, taking the form of a bond-servant, [and] being made in the likeness of men.  Being found in appearance as a man, He humbled Himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.”  So we see that as Adam’s disobedience result in our sinfulness, so much more does Christ’s obedience to the Father, result in our righteousness.

Paul comes to the conclusion of this litany of our blessings in Christ in vs 20 and 21; saying, “The Law came in so that the transgression would increase; but where sin increased, grace abounded all the more, so that, as sin reigned in death, even so grace would reign through righteousness to eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.” 

Paul has said that sin came through Adam, and now he expands on that to say that the law came as a result of sin. Odd though it sounds, he says the law came so that sin would increase.  Now God is not the author of sin, nor did God give the law to make men sin.  But what the law did is it magnified sin.  Sin already existed evidenced by the fact that it reigned in death.  Paul made that clear back in vs 13 and 14.  But when the law came, it acted like a magnifying glass which made our sin more apparent.  It made sin stand out more clearly. And that magnification, or increase,  was necessary to drive men to their need for a Savior. Gal. 3:24 says, “Therefore the Law has become our tutor [to lead us] to Christ, so that we may be justified by faith.”

Now contrast that effect of sin with the grace of God in Christ Jesus. In response to the increase in sin, grace abounded much more.  Much more did grace might reign though righteousness to bring everlasting life through Jesus Christ our Lord.  As great as our sin might be, Christ’s righteousness is greater.  As much as sin increased, much more did grace abound.  And as much as sin reigns in death, how much more does the grace of God that causes us to reign in righteousness, resulting in eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. 

The summation of all of this is simply this.  We are all under the headship of one representative or the other, either under the dominion of sin through Adam, or under the dominion of righteousness through Christ.  We are all naturally born under the dominion of the first Adam. But by faith it is possible to be reborn under the dominion of Christ our Lord.  If you continue in your natural condition, the end will be eternal death.  But if by faith you change allegiance to Jesus Christ you can be saved from that condemnation, and be changed from death to life.

The good news is that we receive this transformation as a gift of God. Have you received this gift of God’s grace today?  Have you believed in the sacrifice on your behalf that Jesus paid so that you might be justified and made righteous before God? Grace is a gift, and like a gift, it must be received.  We have inherited our sin and it’s punishment from our earthly representative man.  But we receive our righteousness and everlasting life as a gift from God, through the payment of Jesus Christ.  Believe on Him today, that you might be saved from the condemnation from Adam, and be transferred to the kingdom of Jesus Christ.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, worship on the beach |
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