“One day you
will stand
before God and you must have his righteousness”
“Therefore
as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to
condemnation; even so by the
righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto
justification of life.” (Rom 5:18)
WHAT
OTHERS HAVE SAID ABOUT THE BOOK OF ROMANS
CHRYSOSTOM (347 –
407) (He was
called ‘The Golden Mouth’) would have Romans read to him twice a week.
So
wonderful and powerful was the book.
MARTIN
LUTHER (1483 –
1546) In
his preface to the Epistle to the Romans he states “This
epistle is in truth the chief part of the New Testament
and
the purest gospel. It would be quite
proper for a Christian, not only to know it
by heart word for word,
but also to study it daily, for it
is the soul’s daily bread. It
can never be read or meditated too much
or too well. The
more thoroughly it is treated, the more precious it becomes, and the
better it
tastes. In itself, it is a shining
light, quite sufficient to illumine the whole scripture.’
Luther
goes on to say “In
this epistle, you will find the greatest abundance of things that a
Christian
ought to know:
What the
law is, the
gospel, sin, punishment, grace, faith, imputed righteousness, Christ,
God, good
works, love, hope. Cross-bearing conduct of ourselves toward the godly
and
toward sinners.
Conduct of
ourselves toward those of weak faith, friends, toward enemies and
toward
ourselves.
Moreover,
all this teaching has been built on
the scripture ground and illustrated by Paul’s personal example and by
the
example of the prophets, so that there is nothing left for us to
desire.
It seems
therefore, that Paul’s object in
this epistle, was to draw up a syllabus of the entire Christian and
evangelical
doctrine, and to prepare an introduction to the entire Old Testament.
For any
person who has received this epistle into his heart has without
question, the
light and strength of the Old Testament in himself.
MELANCTHON (1497 -
1560) –
called the Book of Romans “The compendium
of Christian doctrine”
JOHN CALVIN (1509 –
1564) said of Romans “When anyone
understands this epistle, he has a passage opened to
him to the understanding of the whole
Scripture.”
FREDERICK
GODET
(1812 - 1900) the Swiss theologian called the Book of Romans “The cathedral of the Christian faith.”
G.
CAMPBELL
MORGAN (1863 – 1945) said of Romans
“The most pessimistic page of literature upon which your eyes ever
rested” and
at the same time “the most optimistic poem to which your ears ever
listened.”
RICHARD
LENSKI
wrote that Romans is “Beyond question, the most dynamic of all New
Testament
letters …”
COLERIDGE (1772 –
1834) “I
think St Paul’s Epistle to the Romans the most profound work in
existence…”
MATTHEW
HENRY
(1662 – 1714) states in his Commentary on Romans that in the universe
of ‘spiritual
stars’, there are those that differ from the rest in magnitude and
glory – in
the Old Testament it is David’s Psalms and in the New Testament it is
Paul’s
fourteen Epistles, the chief of which is
Paul’s epistle to the Romans.
ST
PETER THE APOSTLE
wrote about Paul’s letters “As also in
all his epistles, speaking in them of
these things; in which are some things hard to be understood, which
they that
are unlearned and unstable wrest, as they
do also the other scriptures, unto their own destruction.” 2 Peter 3:16
BACKGROUND
Paul writes to
the church at Rome in 57AD.
He was on
the last leg of his third missionary journey around
the
Mediterranean Sea area (Acts 18:23, Acts 21:19) and he was headed for
‘home’ to
Jerusalem to tell the saints what he had done (Acts 21:18-19)
He was at Corinth (Acts 20:3) at the time, and was to leave for
Jerusalem
with money for the poor saints there (Acts 15:26).
Before he
leaves, he writes this letter in
about the space of three months
(Acts 20:3) and sends it to the Christians in Rome by a
lady called Phebe who lived in a suburb of Corinth called
Cenchrea (Rom 16:1). She was travelling to Rome from Corinth at the
time. She
was a Christian woman and obviously highly thought of by Paul.
You see, Paul just couldn’t run down to the
shops and pop this letter in the letter box. Why? There was no postal
service
for the public. The Roman government had its own official letter and
parcel
delivery service for government business, but there was none for the
everyday
citizen. Letters and indeed money, had to be sent via friends and
relatives.
Who
started the church at Rome?
In 33AD
at Pentecost in Jerusalem (Acts
2:1), about 24 years earlier than
when Paul writes this letter in 57AD, there were strangers
of Rome (obviously so called as Paul hadn’t met a lot of
them them) (Acts 2:10). These went back to Rome and started the
Christian
church there.
Now over
the years, many Christians from all
over the East, had gone to live there as well and swelled the church
numbers.
Indeed, some of these were Paul’s friends, and his own converts in the
faith
(Rom 16).
About three
years later (60AD) after Paul writes this letter, he finally gets
taken to
Rome (and not the way he had in mind), but as a prisoner of Rome (Acts
26:32).
This was
his fourth journey (Acts 27:1-16).
Paul had never
been to Rome, but he had heard such good
reports of the church’s faith there (Rom 1:8) which had gone all
over the
world.
He had
wanted to visit there. (Acts 19:21;
Rom 1:13)
Although
God has told him he would go to Rome
and be God’s witness there (Acts 23:11), he was unsure whether he would
or not
get there (Rom 1:10, 13).
After Paul
got to
Rome, he was obviously a trusted ‘prisoner’ and so they let him hire his own house for two years, where
he received and taught all who came to him for about two years (Acts 28:30-31).
You see,
the authorities in Rome hadn’t heard about Paul and knew very
little about him (Acts 21:28) and indeed, were interested in what Paul
had to
say about the Christian sect of which they had heard (Acts 21:29). So
he had a
‘free range’ for two years.
Now around
62-63AD, they let him go as a free man.
But in 64AD
Nero burns Rome and blames the Christians who he saw a big threat.
It has
been said that one in ten people in Rome were becoming Christians. He
therefore
has the excuse to go after Paul.
Paul is
captured soon after and put back into
prison. This time there is no hired house for him.
Paul was beheaded
in Rome about three years after in 67AD.
This
beheading takes place about ten years after he writes his
letter to
the Romans.
Year |
Event |
33 AD |
Pentecost
at Jerusalem |
45-48 AD |
Paul’s 1st
trip |
50-53 AD |
Pauls’ 2nd
trip |
54-58 AD |
Paul’s
third trip. 57AD
writes the book of Romans from Corinth (Greece) – 24 years after
Pentecost |
58-60 AD |
Prisoner
at Caesarea for two years. |
60-61 AD |
Paul’s 4th
Trip. Taken to Rome to appeal to Caesar. Three
years after writing Romans |
61-63 AD |
Hires his
own house for 2 years – under ‘house arrest’ |
63 AD |
Paul
released |
64 AD |
Emperor
Nero burns down Rome and blames the Christians. |
66-67 AD |
Paul
re-taken as a prisoner |
68 AD |
Paul
beheaded – 10 years
after he writes Romans |
Why did
Paul write his letter to the Romans?
Paul
wanted to let the Christians at Rome
know that he was on his way there. He writes Romans around 57 AD and
this is
before God told Paul around 61AD, (Acts 23:11) that he would send him
to Rome.
At the time of writing the Book of Romans Paul did not feel sure that
he would
get away from Jerusalem alive (Rom 15:31). As a result it seemed a very
good
idea to get down on paper a written
explanation of the true nature of the gospel of Christ according to
Paul’s
doctrine. After all, as the apostle to the Gentiles, it was only
fitting
that to leave a written copy in the world’s capital on the nature and
gospel of
Christ. Of course, as we have seen, Rome and the Roman Catholic
‘church’ has
been the most violent and deadly to Christians for two thousand years
and
therefore Paul sends God’s sword direct into the eye of Satan who sits
and has
his own ‘church’ in Rome.
The
background to the Roman epistle
It was the
common Jewish belief of the
finality of Moses and his laws as the final expression of the will of
God.
There was Jewish insistence that Gentiles who would become Christians
must be
circumcised and keep the Laws of Moses. Indeed, Christianity had its
foundation
taken from the Jewish religion and powerful Jewish leaders were
determined to
keep it so. Circumcision was the physical rite which stood as the
initial
ceremony in the Jewish naturalisation of Gentiles.
Paul’s
main theme and insistence
All men
are sinful and the law is the cause.
Man’s acceptance with God does not depend on man trying to keep God’s
laws – he
can’t. Why? They are pure and holy and man is not.
God’s laws
only bring out the sin in man.
So God
solved the problem by becoming a man,
Jesus Christ, to fulfil the law on man’s behalf. Entry into heaven can
only be
by perfect obedience to God’s laws. Man can’t do it, so Christ did it
on behalf
of all men. We get into heaven by the obedience of Christ. Man’s
acceptance
with God does not depend on what man has done, but on what Christ has
done for
him.
Theme: The
righteousness of God
Importance
of Romans
The
eternal question that man has always had,
is best summed up by Job in the Old Testament, when he says “How then
can man
be justified with God? or how
can he be clean that is
born of a woman? Job 25:4. Paul’s
epistle to the
Romans leaves us in no doubt.
Romans is a
reasoned
argument that outlines salvation on how to get the righteousness of
God. Romans
tells us how to get right with God.
God gives
Paul the most skilful and surgical
of words that leaves no-one in doubt on how to get to heaven. Like the
rest of
the King James Bible, the book of Romans, as written in the English
(that means
no Greek of Hebrew needed) is a legal document that can stand the
scrutiny of
any courtroom in the land.
CHAPTER SUMMARIES
Ch 1, 2, 3 = All are
sinners
Ch 4, 5 = Justification
Ch 6, 7, 8 = Subduing
the flesh
Ch 9, 10, 11 = Israel
Ch 12,13,14,15 = Service
Ch 16 = Salutations and
warning
Ch 1, 2, 3 = All are
sinners
Ch. 1 – The obvious
‘bad’ sinners
Man’s blatant, vile and
sinful mockery of God.
The universal and open
ungodliness &
unrighteousness
of all
In the
first sixteen verses, Paul introduces
himself, confirming who Jesus Christ is, speaking of their well-known
faith and
his longing to be with them to preach the gospel. He
then rebukes all men, Gentile and Jew,
who, in spite of knowing who God is and that their eternity is in hell,
they obstinately,
wilfully and publicly commit the most vile of sins. These are the
sodomites and
lesbians that flaunt themselves in Gay Pride marches.
Does this
include the Jew? Yes, a very brief
look at the conduct of the lives under various kings will show this.
Solomon
for example, sacrificed and threw babies into the fire. All of the
Northern
kings were evil and a lot of the Southern kings as well.
As Paul
states For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven
against all ungodliness
and unrighteousness of men, who hold the truth in unrighteousness; Rom 1:18
Yes, they
know the
truth but they don’t let it affect their ungodly and unrighteous
behaviour.
Every day, they know and perceive that there is a God. In their nature
they
know there is a God, so that they are without excuse. Their lives
becomes so
dark, evil and sinful that they neither thank God or honour him. But
they are like
the men of Sodom inflicting blindness on themselves by committing worse
evils
without shame - going from idolatry to the most abominable sins of the
sodomite
and lesbian and every vice imaginable. Furthermore, they enjoy watching
others
do the same without rebuking them.
Ch. 2 – The hidden
‘good’ sinners
Hypocrisy &
self-righteousness
All have judged -
especially the Jew
Now the
basic reader says to himself “Phew! I’m
glad I’m not as bad as those dreadful sinners in chapter one.” And this
of
course is man’s pitiful condition. As the scriptures repeatedly say Every way of a man is right in his own
eyes: but the LORD pondereth the hearts. Prov 21:2
In this
chapter, God tightens the noose and
extends his rebuke to include the ‘good’ people and the ‘secret’ and
less
obvious sinners, especially the self-righteous. All those that judge
others,
those who are hypocrites and those who would lead an ‘open’ and
‘honest’ life
by natural inclinations – these are the enemies of God’s law.
So in
Chapter one, God addresses the obvious
and openly ‘bad’ sinners and in Chapter two, God drives his sword into
the
‘good’ sinners.
The latter
are those that are ready to pass
judgment on other people as is the manner of all hypocrites. In looking
to
present themselves in good light so as to esteem themselves pure, their
hearts
are full of greed, hatred, pride and all vileness.
As Christ
rebukes Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!
for ye make clean the
outside of the cup and of the platter, but within they are full of
extortion
and excess. Matt 23:25
All men
are
mentioned as ….There is
none
righteous, no, not one: Rom 3:10.
Indeed,
the Jew is
singled out for particular mention along with the Gentile.
These
seemingly
‘good’ people are the very ones that despise the goodness and
righteousness of
God and therefore heap up wrath for themselves because of their hard
hearts toward
God.
God lets
no-one
escape. No-one is able to pass as a sinless person.
God has
wrath
toward those who would attempt to lead a ‘good’ life by their ‘natural’
goodness, kind–heartedness, human endeavour and love of mankind.
God does
not let
anyone escape his scorn and derision and future wrath and he sees them
as
nothing more than hard hearted and unrepentant sinners.
He ends up
by
saying that a true Jew is one that has been spiritually circumcised of
the
heart and not just the flesh (v28-29).
Ch. 3 – All have sinned
Jews & Gentiles are all
sinners
The law exposes sin
The law of faith is the
answer
Justification
So Paul
sweeps both the ‘bad’ and ‘good’
sinners into one big heap saying that no-one is better than anyone
else. All
are sinners in the sight of God. Paul shows that both Jews and Gentiles
are all
under sin with the difference that the Jew have been given the oracles
of God. But
God’s laws weren’t given to save the Jew but to condemn him such that
he might
know sin. Indeed the whole world is guilty before God (v19) for by the
law is
the knowledge of sin (v20).
Paul then
reveals the righteousness of God
who is Jesus Christ manifest in the flesh (v22).
Furthermore,
no one can be justified before
God by trying to keep his laws. As Paul states, there is only one way
to access
God’s grace and that is by Being
justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in
Christ Jesus: Rom 3:24.
Paul then
states that the only sacrifice that
God will accept (called a propitiation) is the blood of Christ (25).
God will
justify those who believe in Jesus (v26).
Paul then
introduces a law, other than Moses’
laws, and he calls it the law of faith (v27).
In summary
then, God uses the first three chapters of Romans to
establish
the universal nature of man’s sin. But God’s laws have exposed sin.
Why? It’s
obvious that if there were no laws, there would be no sin. As a result,
if the
law exposes sin, it stands to reason that laws can’t make sin ‘go
away’. God’s
remedy is the law of faith.
Ch 4, 5 =
Justification
Ch. 4 – Abraham’s faith
Justified without works
Imputed righteousness
So in chapter
four, Paul presents the unique and ‘two-sided’ Abraham who
straddles the
fence by having a foot in both camps of the Jew and the Gentile.
The Jews have
Abraham as their physical ancestor but they do not, and
will not, have/copy his faith.
The
Gentiles do not have Abraham as their ancestor but can
have his faith.
The Jew
was angry and incensed that the
Gentile could have access to the grace of God the Father even though
they
weren’t Jews.
Paul
aggravates the Jew further by having the
Gentile call Abraham our father (v 1)
This was
unforgiveable to the Jewish race,
who of all men, vigorously pursued their share of righteousness by the
privileges they enjoyed as God’s people, and they added them to the
works they
performed.
Back in
chapter two, Paul tells them that a
true Jew has been circumcised in the heart not just circumcised in the
flesh. 28
For he is
not a Jew, which is one outwardly;
neither is that circumcision, which
is outward in the flesh: 29 But
he is a Jew, which is one inwardly; and circumcision is that of the heart,
in the spirit, and not in the letter; whose
praise is not of men, but of God. Rom
2:28-29
So Paul
makes it absolutely clear, that the
Jew cannot be justified before God just because they are the physical
heirs of
Abraham and try to have a righteousness resulting from their works. If
they
wish to be genuine heirs of faith, they must copy Abraham’s faith who
was
justified before God without works. As Paul says But to him
that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth the
ungodly, his faith is
counted for righteousness. Rom 4:5. This is
called imputed righteousness.
Now
Abraham received this righteousness before he was circumcised as a
Jew. How could this happen? God gave him a promise that couldn’t be
believed in
the natural. God promised Abraham who was one hundred years old, and
beyond the
fertile stage necessary to have children, and his wife Sarah was dead
in the
womb, that he would be the father of many nations and countless
children. Wow!
Who’d believe that? Well, Abraham did and therefore God rewarded him by
giving
him a righteousness (imputed) that couldn’t be gained by works. As Paul
says
Abraham’s faith was counted to him for righteousness (v5). Though it
seemed
impossible in the natural, God eventually made it come true.
Paul ends
up with the parallel of our situation in that, without works, a
man can get to heaven by believing that Christ’s blood can wash away
all sin
(v24-25) by believing on him (v24). Just as Abraham was dead in the
body but
God let him give birth, we, spiritually speaking are dead in trespasses
and
sins, but we become born again.
An aside: God sees
sin and demands a blood sacrifice. Under
the Old Testament this was imperfect animal blood which was only a
temporary
payment and had to be repeatedly performed. Only God’s blood could
permanently satisfy
God and what God’s law demanded. God dying on the cross, was the
highest
honour that he could pay his law. The fact that a universe of
people can
get saved and go to heaven is secondary.
Ch. 5 – Adam vs Christ
Christ died for the ungodly
We are justified by his
blood
Having
established that …being
justified by faith, we
have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ: Rom
5:1, Paul
points out that we
now have access to the grace of God.
Paul then
superbly compares Adam with Christ. Like a computer virus that
can spread to all the computers in the whole world, Adam’s sin has been
passed
on down to us over six thousand years. This is Adam’s legacy to the
world.
The
‘virus’ of sin is already in us the moment we are conceived in the
womb. Indeed, we sin because we are born sinners. As Paul
states … as by one man sin entered into
the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that
all
have sinned: Rom 5:12.
But he
gives the solution: For as by
one man's disobedience many were made sinners, so by the
obedience of one shall many be made
righteous. Rom 5:19.
Indeed, 8
But God
commendeth his love
toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. 9 Much more then, being now
justified by his
blood, we shall be saved from wrath through him. Rom
5:8-9
When we
are physically born, we are condemned from the start.
We are born
sinners. Therefore we must become spiritually
born again to be declared righteous.
Ch 6, 7, 8 =
Subduing
the flesh
Ch. 6 – Daily struggle with
sin
We are to be servants of
righteousness
So Paul
raises the question that some might
ask. “Well, if we can have God’s grace for sinning, why not have more
of God’s
grace by committing more sin?” His answer? Of course not!
As
Christians, we have been …baptised into his death (vs 3)
by the
Holy Ghost and are … buried
with him by baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised
up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should
walk in
newness of life. Rom 6:4.
Paul goes
on to say that Christ … died unto
sin once: but in that he (the
Christian) liveth, he liveth
unto God. Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto
sin, but
alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. (Rom
6:10-11)
In this
chapter, Paul outlines what our daily
behaviour should be. We were servants of
sin but now we are to be servants of
righteousness. There is the struggle between the two natures that
Christians have – the inner man is spiritual, but being born again, is
also
trapped in a body of flesh and sin. This teaches us that while being
utterly
freed from the power of sin, we cannot be lazy, idle and secure in this
knowledge.
We now
have genuine freedom from sin. We have
a choice. This choice and liberty we now have, does not abolish the
law, but
supplies us with the things that the law demands – willingness and love
to
fulfil the law as Paul outlines it (1Cor 11:1). The liberty that a
Christian
has is not a flesh liberty to indulge the flesh. As all Christians
find, when
we have true liberty, we must practice true discipline on ourselves.
Ch. 7 – Dead to the law
The law is holy
Our natures of flesh are
evil
In this
chapter, Paul uses the example of a
woman who becomes free from her marriage as a result of her husband
dying. When
a husband dies his wife becomes free to marry another. So here is man’s
problem. In an unsaved state, our old man/nature gets very angry with
what the
law demands because it can’t fulfil it. Now, it’s not that the law is
evil, far
from it, as it is holy just and good (vs 12). The problem is that man’s
nature
is evil. Like a fisherman that throws out bait into the water to
attract the
fish, God ‘throws’ out his laws to attract the sin. No bait – no fish,
no law –
no sin.
How could
Christ fulfil the demands of the
law that produces nothing but sin in man’s flesh?
Here is an
explanation: There was a movie not
so long ago called “Ghostbusters” where three men had a machine that
could
attract, trap and destroy all the evil ghosts. Similarly, Christ is
‘the
machine’ whereby in the flesh he could fulfil/‘defeat’ the law by not
sinning.
So he does
this on our behalf. Like a
gladiator in a ring fighting for the release of condemned prisoners
(should he
lose they die). He kills the opposing foe. They shout “We have won!
We’ve won!”
just as if they had delivered the death blows themselves.
Those who
don’t understand the correct use of
the law, completely misunderstand what it is designed for. They strut
around in
their conceit and imagine that they are satisfying the law by their
works. But
the opposite is true as they are still alive to the demands of the law
by
attempting to satisfy them. The purpose of the law is hidden from them.
Paul then
goes on to outline the struggle we
have as Christians and how our flesh daily fights with the Holy Ghost
within
us. Both make demands that are opposite with each other. This fight
lasts as
long as a person lives. In fact, the ‘closer’ that we would become to
our
heavenly father, the more violently our flesh rebels and tries to grow
stronger. Paul sums up this dilemma with 24
O wretched
man that I am! who
shall deliver me from the body of this death? 25
I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. So then with
the mind I
myself serve the law of God; but with the flesh the law of sin. Romans 7:24-25
Ch. 8 – No condemnation
Comfort if walking after
the Spirit
As Luther
points out in his Commentary on
Romans, in this chapter, Paul comforts those strugglers fighting
against their
flesh and sin. He adds the proviso that they walk after the Spirit and
not the
flesh. This Christian walk with God’s indwelling Holy Ghost, makes us
spiritual
and subdues the flesh. We are assured that no matter how violently sin
rages in
us, we are still the children of God (v16). Of course if you continue
to live
after the flesh you shall die – literally (1Cor 11:30) but still go
home to
heaven. Paul then reminds us that while we suffer on earth (v 18), we
look
forward to being delivered from our bondage of corruption (v21). Our
‘crosses’,
sufferings, infirmities of the flesh, necessities, persecutions and
distresses
(2Cor 12:10) help to sever all ties down here on earth and help us look
toward
the glorious liberty of the children of God (v21) by having the power
of Christ
rest upon us (2Cor 12:10). Paul ends with the glorious promise that all
things
work together for good to them that love God (v28). Of course this
seems as
impossible just like Abraham when confronted with his barren condition
and the
promise of future children and nations. But we are left with the rolled
gold
guarantee that nothing can separate us from the love of God (v 38-39).
Ch 9,10,11 =
Israel
Ch. 9 – Israel
Paul’s heaviness and
sorrow for Israel
Paul calls
the Israelites his kinsmen in the
flesh (v3) as Paul was also born a Jew and called a Hebrew (1Cor
11:22). He
states that not all born of Abraham are children of God, but those of
the
promise are counted for the seed (v8) ie those born of Isaac (v7). But
the Arab
would say they were born of Abraham also. This is correct. However, because Ishmael was the result of
Abraham’s disobedience, they are
not children of the promise. The
children of the promise are those in Jacob (v13). You see, although
born of
Isaac, Esau is not of the seed because God says Esau have I hated (v13)
and
Jacob have I loved. Why? Esau rejected God’s covenant. Furthermore, a
study of
the scriptures show that Esau took Ishmael’s daughters, Bashemath and
Mahamath as
wives (Gen 26:34; 28:9; 36:3). Esau and Ishmael fathered the Arabs and
not the
Jews.
Paul then
continues saying that God will also
call a people who were not his people, meaning the Gentiles (v25). The
reason given
is that Israel has been disobedient to God and sought after
righteousness by
the works of the law (v32). God therefore will put a stumbling-stone
(this is
Jesus Christ) in the way of the Jew. God is wanting to make the Jew
jealous
because the Gentile may now believe and receive the righteousness of
God, Jesus
Christ, by faith.
Ch. 10 – Israel
Paul’s desire they might
be saved
You can
hear Paul’s heart breaking as he
tells of the zeal of the Jews in attempting to get a righteousness by
their own
works/means. They are rejecting Jesus Christ and his righteousness, who
has
fulfilled the law perfectly on their behalf. Paul’s heart’s desire is
that they
might be saved by doing it God’s way. He goes on to say there is no
difference
between Jews, Greeks and Gentiles (v12) and that anyone can call on the
name of
the Lord and be saved by believing (v13).
He then
establishes and promotes the office
of the preacher saying that by preaching, faith can come by hearing the
word of
God (v17). Indeed, God’s mission is to make Israel jealous and this is
even
stated by Moses (v19). But Paul ends up by saying that this seems to be
a
fruitless task (21).
Ch. 11 – Israel
God has not cast them
away
In this
chapter, Paul states that Israel has
been broken off so that the Gentile can be graffed in (a graff is a
grave.
Christians are put into the death of Christ). This is not
a loss of salvation for Israel but simply a temporary halt to
accessing God’s goodness. This is misunderstood by some. Israel’s roots
are not
destroyed, but they are just broken off as branches. They are to have a
temporary pause (about 2000 years) of access to God, They will be
graffed in
again during the last half of the seven year tribulation. Why? Paul
goes on to
say that the gifts and calling of God are without repentance (v29). God
has not
let them go. He has originally called them as his people and he will
honour
them again as his own (v26). Paul concludes by extolling the virtues of
God as
his ways are past finding out (v33).
Ch
12,13,14,15 = Service
& worship
Ch. 12 - Living sacrifices
Christian behaviour
This 12th
chapter teaches us the nature of the true worship of God. We are called
to
offer up sacrifices to the Lord, but not about money or houses as
prescribed
under the law. No, these sacrifices are to be our own bodies in
everyday
living, as we are to be living sacrifices and slay our own lusts in our
service
toward others. This is true worship and is a daily thing. Many
Christians miss
this point believing that worship only belongs in church on a Sunday.
Paul
describes the
outward conduct required of Christians in how we are to teach, preach,
rule,
serve, give, suffer, love, live and act towards our friends, enemies
and
everybody else. These are the works that God requires and are faith in
action. This
is true worship to God.
Ch. 13 – Higher powers
Our duty towards government
Paul
states that the civil government is
there for our good. They are God’s ministers (v6). We are to obey them
as far
as is possible in the Lord. We do not steal from them at tax time for
example.
They are there for our protection as the wicked are not free to do evil
as they
wish. This is why the civil government must be honoured for what it can
provide
in maintaining law and order. Paul restates the last five of the Ten
Commandments of adultery, steal, kill, witness and covet under loving
thy
neighbour as thyself (v9).
Ch. 14 – Weak in faith
Our duty towards weaker
brethren
Paul
teaches us to bear those weak in the
faith very tenderly and not to injure them. Accordingly it may be
sometimes
better to yield somewhat to those who are weaker in the faith such that
the
effects of the gospel is maintained and not perish. As babies in the
faith,
they have tender consciences and can be confused until they know the
truth
about things regarding food (v2) days (v5) and drink (17).
Ch. 15 – Christian love
We are not to please
ourselves
In this
chapter Paul outlines that we are not
to please ourselves when it comes to other Christians. He refers to the
frailty
of their manifest sins, their unpleasant manners, habits and
imperfections.
Indeed, we are reminded that Christ has longsuffering to us every day.
This is
summed up in verses four and five.
4
For
whatsoever things were
written aforetime were written for our learning, that we through
patience and
comfort of the scriptures might have hope. Now the God of patience and
consolation grant you to be likeminded one toward another according to
Christ
Jesus: Rom 15:4-5
Paul puts
forward his qualifications as the minister of Jesus Christ to
the Gentiles (v16) but not on another man’s territory/foundation (v20).
He
reveals his wish to come to Rome via Spain (24) and of his current
endeavour to
take some money to the poor saints in Jerusalem. He finishes by praying
that he
will be delivered from unbelievers (v31).
Ch 16 =
Salutations and
warning
Ch. 16 – Salutations
Warning – all those
whose idol is their belly including the future
Roman
Catholic
church
In the
first sixteen verses of this chapter
he mentions and salutes the saints in Rome. He finishes with the
warning of
those that would have doctrine contrary to Paul. He says their
god is their belly and are smooth talkers that can deceive
the simple minded saint (v18). For it is out of Rome, for two thousand
years,
and through the Roman Catholic system, that they have overwhelmed the
world.
They are truly called the whore of Babylon (Rev 17:1, 15, 16; 19:2).
Paul
denounces them, warns us of them and that God would save us from them.
Indeed,
the flesh wars against the Spirit (Gal 5:17) and as the days get darker
and the
word of God disappears, the world is indeed becoming more fleshy.
Why
their belly? Paul also knew that in the future, Rome’s priests would
say their
wafer is the actual body of Jesus. You must eat their ‘magic cookie’
and have
‘jesus’ in your belly to be accepted by God. Absolute blasphemy!
By Harley Hitchcock.
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