“The
Power of God Revealed”
Romans 1:8-17 (Message #2)
January 24, 2016 (Sligo,
Ireland)
INTRODUCTION:
Paul had a threefold purpose for writing his Epistle to the
Romans:
1.
He wrote to encourage the Roman believers in
their Christian faith. He knew many of them personally from his previous
missionary journeys (notice his personal greetings in chapter 16). Rome was the
capital city and it was a magnet for people from every corner of the vast Roman
Empire. Believers from all over Turkey and Palestine had been drawn to Rome
especially because of its opportunities for commerce and education. Some had
also come specifically to bring the Gospel and plant churches. Of course, by
“churches” we’re not speaking of buildings or denominations but rather, little
groups of Christians scattered all around the area, meeting in homes for
worship, fellowship, Bible teaching, and communion.
2.
He wrote to pave the way for a planned missionary
journey to take the Gospel to Spain. He speaks of this twice in Romans 15 (cf.
verses 24 and 28). His plan was to spend some time ministering among the
Christians in Rome on his way to Spain. He wrote to give them a heads-up about
his planned trip.
3.
He wrote to provide them with a thorough
explanation of God’s plan of salvation. Because most people had no access
to the written Word of God, the early Christians were dependent upon the
teaching from Christian leaders. Some of those leaders were trained in the
Scriptures but many others were not. As a result, misinformation often took hold
and got passed around. As an Apostle, an important part of Paul’s ministry was
to oversee the churches and make sure they were being taught pure doctrine. In
his various writings we see that he was often trying to combat error and even
heresy. Romans is the most complete treatise in all of Scripture on the
multi-faceted Doctrine of Salvation. He draws from his vast knowledge of the OT
Scriptures to explain how a sinner can be made right with God.
TRANSITION:
Last Sunday we looked at Paul’s introduction in which he identifies himself as the Messenger, commissioned by God, and gives a brief overview of the Message—the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
In our text for
today, Paul expresses his love for the Roman believers and tells them about his
desire to visit them in Rome. He looks forward to encouraging them even as he
knows they will be an encouragement to him. In verses 14-17 he tells them of
his personal motivations for proclaiming the Gospel. He gets very personal and
in these verses we can feel his heartbeat, his passion, and his love for Christ
and the Gospel. Coming to verse 17 we will hear him utter those words that
started the Protestant Reformation under Martin Luther in 1517: “The
just shall live by faith.” This brief statement flies in the face of
every other religion in human history. All the religions of man are based on doing
good works, rule-keeping, and having insider information about spiritual truth,
all in the hopes of doing enough to win God’s approval. However, Christianity
is not about what we can do to save ourselves, but about what a Holy and Loving
God has already accomplished for us if we will but put our complete
faith and trust in Him. Religions are all spelled, “DO.” But authentic
Christianity is spelled, “DONE.” There’s a big difference!
MAIN BODY:
Verse
8: First, I thank my God through
Jesus Christ for all of you, because your faith is proclaimed in all the world.
- Paul was a man of prayer. We know that he prayed regularly for the churches, for his colleagues in the ministry, for the leaders of the churches, and for the individual believers that he knew. He was “thankful” for them.
- Paul also mentions that the faith of the believers in Rome was well known throughout the “world,” meaning the Roman world. Their faith and devotion to Christ and the Gospel served as an example to others.
Verses
9-10: For God is my witness, whom I serve with my spirit in the Gospel of
His Son, that without ceasing I mention you 10 always in my prayers, asking that somehow by God’s
will I may now at last succeed in coming to you.
- “God…whom I serve in my spirit” Paul’s service was not for show, to win the approval of men. Too many so-called “ministers” and members of the clergy today have mixed motives, being as concerned with what they get out of it as they are with what they might contribute. Calling on God as his witness Paul declares that his motives are pure and unadulterated.
- “…that somehow…I may now…succeed in coming to you.” Paul’s desire to visit Rome was no spur-of-the-moment thing. He had apparently been praying about it for some time, seeking God’s will as to the timing.
Verse
11: For I long to see you, that I may impart to you some spiritual gift
to strengthen you—
- Don’t jump to a wrong conclusion here. Paul knew that he was not the giver of spiritual gifts. That is the exclusive right of the Holy Spirit. Paul had no ability to bestow spiritual gifts like healing, teaching, or prophecy. He was simply looking forward to exercise his own spiritual gifts among them for the purpose of encouraging and strengthening them in their walk of faith.
- “…to strength you” KJV says, “so that you may be established.” To be established is to be planted firmly, like an oak beside a river (see Ps. 1). It means to be there for the long-haul, not just temporarily. It means to be strong and able to withstand anything that comes against it. This is what Paul wanted the Roman believers to be in regard to their faith because he knew that storms would soon arise to test their mettle.
Verse
12: …that is, that we may be mutually encouraged by
each other's faith, both yours and mine.
- Paul saw ministry as mutually beneficial. As he preached and taught the Word of God it blessed him. It also blessed his hearers. They, in turn, encouraged him to continue using his gifts to serve God. Everybody got blessed in the process. Anyone who has ever taught a Sunday School class knows that the teacher usually gets as much or more out of the preparation as the students. It is a win-win situation.
Verse
13: I want you to know, brothers, that I have often intended to
come to you (but thus far have been prevented), in order that I may reap some
harvest among you as well as among the rest of the Gentiles.
- He had often intended to travel to Rome but something always stopped him. How curious! At first glance we might jump to the conclusion that Paul was talking of the devil throwing up impediments. But we actually see this same thing happening in Acts 16:6-7. “And they [Paul, Silas, and Timothy] went through the region of Phrygia and Galatia, having been forbidden by the Holy Spirit to speak the word in Asia. 7 And when they had come up to Mysia, they attempted to go into Bithynia, but the Spirit of Jesus did not allow them.” You see, God shuts doors as well as opening them. If we seek His will He will guide our steps. Sometimes it’s just a matter of God’s timing and He doesn’t always reveal the reasons why He does what He does. Paul was content to trust in God’s perfect plan and timing.
- “…in order that I may reap some harvest among you” He’s not talking about some personal benefit that he will receive. He’s not talking about money or possessions that he will “harvest” from them. He’s referring to spiritual blessings related to their friendship and fellowship and serving together in the cause of Christ. He’s talking about souls they will see won to Christ, new congregations planted, and widening the influence of the Gospel in the area around Rome.
- But exactly what motivated this kind of missionary zeal in Paul? He will tell us in the following verses.
Verse
14: I am under obligation both to Greeks and to barbarians, both to the
wise and to the foolish.
- In this verse we have the first of three “I am…” statements by Paul. Taken together we get a clear picture of his attitude toward his ministry.
- “I am under obligation” KJV has, “I
am a debtor…” Paul believed that he owed the Gospel to those who had
not heard it. He sensed a powerful moral obligation to tell people about Christ
and His death, burial, and resurrection, and about how they could have their
sins forgiven by God if they would but believe on the Lord Jesus Christ. The
moral obligation he felt was not unlike the obligation of a survivor in a
lifeboat surrounded by people yet in the water, near drowning. He had an
obligation to throw out the only lifeline that could save them.
- “…both to Greeks and to barbarians, both to the wise and to the foolish.” The Greeks were the cultured people of Paul’s day, based on their ability to read and speak the Greek language. The Romans had conquered Greece but they had adopted the Grecian art, culture, and language. In Paul’s day anyone who could not speak Greek was called a “barbarian,” which meant uncultured or primitive.
- “…wise and foolish” Paul could also have said, “…tall and short, rich and poor, male and female, black and white, ugly and beautiful, etc.” He just means that the Gospel is for everyone.
Verse
15: So I am eager to
preach the Gospel to you also who are in Rome.
- “I am eager…” This is his second “I am…” statement. KJV says, “I am ready…” This is not the kind of readiness you express when your wife asks you if you are ready to drive to the hospital for your 10-year colonoscopy. “Yes, dear. I’m ready to go.” No, this is an excited eagerness to be off on a vacation to the Caribbean for two weeks in the middle of winter! “YES! I’m ready! Let’s go! Where’s the taxi?”
- Nothing else got Paul so revved-up as being able to preach and teach the Word of God and share the Good News about Jesus!
Verse
16: For I am not ashamed of
the Gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who
believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.
- The first two “I am…” statements were in the positive. This one is in the negative: “I am not ashamed of the Gospel…” I have observed that a lot of Christians seem to be ashamed of the Gospel, at least that’s how they act. They never share it with anyone. They never start spiritual conversations. They never ask friends or family members questions about spiritual things. They never share their personal testimony of how they came to faith in Christ. It’s odd, isn’t it? If knowing Jesus and having the assurance that we will go to Heaven when we die is really the best Good News in the world, then why are we so afraid to say anything about it unless someone asks us point-blank, which they almost never do.
- “I am not ashamed of the Gospel, because/for it is the power of God for salvation…” Here’s the secret of Paul’s witnessing zeal and courage. He was absolutely convinced that there is nothing else in the world that can change people from the inside out and transform them from sinners into saints. God had done that for him and he knew that if God could save him, a proud, self-righteous religious bigot who persecuted Christians to their deaths, then He could save anyone! Paul understood that the greatest demonstration of the awesome power of God is not seen in the realm of nature—fire, lightening, thunder, floods, etc.—but in the turning of a sinner from darkness to light, from death to life. That’s the real dunamis [power] of God, for salvation.
- “…salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek [Gentile].” God is no respecter of persons. He will save anyone who will come to Him in faith and trust in Christ. Jew/Gentile, Greek/barbarian, rich/poor; it doesn’t matter to Him. He just looks at the heart.
Verse
17: For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith
for faith, as it is written, “The righteous shall live by faith.”
- “For in it the righteousness of God is revealed” What does the “it” refer to? You have to back in the text to the previous verse, verse 16. “It” is “the Gospel” that has the power to save, to transform, and to make a person new. Paul says that the Gospel reveals the righteousness of God in His dealings with sinners.
- By faith, we believe that we are sinners, both by nature and by choice, because the Bible says so.
- By faith, we believe that God is absolutely Holy and Just, because the Bible says so.
- By faith, we believe that for reasons known only to Him, by His Son’s death on the cross, we can have our sins forgiven, because the Bible says so.
- By faith, we believe that there is nothing we can do to save ourselves but must throw ourselves on God’s mercy, admitting that we are sinners and trusting in Jesus’ death on the cross in our place, because the Bible says so.
- “…from faith to/for faith.” We come to Christ by faith. Faith is the beginning of the salvation process, but it is also the goal! When a person first exercises faith in Christ he is saved from the penalty of sin and is declared righteous by God. But as he lives by faith, daily, he is saved from the power of sin and enabled to live a life of righteousness before God and men.
- "The just/righteous shall live by faith.” Here Paul quotes from the OT, from Habakkuk 2:4. And this verse really serves as the theme for the whole Book of Romans. Moreover, as I mentioned in the beginning, this is the verse that lit the Reformation fires in 1517 when Martin Luther read this passage and understood it for the first time, despite the fact that he had looked at it many times before. Something finally clicked into place for him and the light-bulb came on. On that day, he stepped off the religious treadmill that he had been on all his life in Roman Catholicism and placed his entire faith and trust in Christ, renouncing his “good works” and religiosity as having any value toward salvation, and threw himself on the mercy of God, holding nothing back. And for the first time in his life he experienced the peace of God, the peace “that passes all understanding.”
CONCLUSION:
If you have never taken the step of trusting in
Christ as your Savior and Lord then I would encourage you not to put it off.
The Bible says in II Cor. 6:2, “Behold, now is the acceptable time;
behold, now is the day of salvation.” You may be a sincere, religious
person, with high morals and impeccable ethics but those things, laudable as
they are, cannot save you. You may have been baptized, gone to confession, attended
church, and performed many pious acts of charity, however those things cannot
save you either. The Bible declares in Ephesians 2:8-9, “For by grace you have
been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of
God; 9 not
as a result of works, so that no one may boast.” God offers to you the gift of
salvation but you must choose to receive it, or not. The choice is yours.
And lastly, for you who are believers and have
already come to know Him in a real and personal way I want to ask you a couple
of questions: “What is holding you back from telling your story and sharing the
message of salvation with others? Do you sense that you are a debtor—that
you owe it to them to tell them how they can find eternal life? Are you eager
and ready to share the Good News with those whom God brings across your
path? Or are you ashamed of the Gospel of Christ, not fully convinced
that everyone needs to hear it?
I challenge you to begin starting out every
morning praying and asking God for at least one opportunity to share the Gospel
with someone. Then be on the alert because He loves to answer that prayer. The
Holy Spirit will present you with open doors to be a witness for Christ. The
question is, “Will you have the courage to step through those doors when they open
up?”
FEEDBACK:
Any comments,
questions, or observations about what I’ve presented?
No comments:
Post a Comment