Monday, June 22, 2026

ROMANS 9:6-13 “CAN THE WORD OF GOD FAIL?”

 


The Bible answers the 3 most fundamental questions that every human being asks: “Who am I? Why am I here? Where am I going?” Once we understand that we are God- created beings we will also begin to ask this question: “What is the nature of the God who has created us?”  We will also ask this question: “What is wrong with this world?”  Paul in this letter has told us what is wrong: “All are under sin!” (Rom.3:9-12). This also begs the question: “How will I stand before my Creator”?  Romans  Chapters 1 - 8   deal with the doctrine of salvation and the nature of the gospel, answering the question, How will I stand before my Creator? In the gospel  God’s way of justifying sinners is revealed

In Romans Chapters 9 -11 Paul pauses to consider the plight of his own people - the Jews.  The Jews, by and large refused to believe the gospel. The gospel is not simply a message. It is a person. They refused to hear the Christ (the Messiah) when He came among them. In so doing they refused God’s gift of salvation. Although they were a religious people, and although they considered themselves as children of Abraham, the love for the God whom they claimed to worship was absent. They were merely religious. Although in possession of the  holy Scriptures they twisted the Scriptures given them by Moses and the prophets to make it conform to their human standards[1]. Their hearts have grown dull. Their ears can barely hear. They have closed their eyes (Matt. 13:15à Isa 6:9,10). And very often in their history, they left the God sanctioned worship and worshipped the gods of the surrounding nations.   When, in the fullness of time, God came in the flesh (Gal.4:4,5), they hated His teaching. They rejected Him and conspired to kill Him[2]. Then they hated   His disciples.

Paul, before his conversion, was one of them. He became a persecutor of those that loved Jesus.  But when Jesus sovereignly met him on the road to Damascus (cf. Acts 9), he became one of Jesus’ most eloquent and outspoken disciples. Wherever he went, he preached to the Jew first, and only then to the gentiles (Rom.1:16).  That was his pattern everywhere he went in Asia Minor[3] – wherever the Jews had been scattered among the nations. When they refused to listen, he went to the gentiles.  

In Rom. 9: 1-5 we see how the hardness of the hearts of his Jewish compatriots grieved Paul. He tells us of his desperate desire for his own people to be saved from the wrath of God. Paul’s heart is genuinely broken by the general lack of response of the Jews to the gospel.

The time has now come for him to talk about the theological perspective behind this rejection of the Lord Jesus Christ by the Jews.

OUTLINE

1.       9:6a - Assurance: The Word of God has not failed

2.       9:6b-7a - An astonishing assertion:  Not all who are descended from Israel belong to Israel.

3.       9:7b-13-Amazing grace rather than ethnic heritage: Two Old Testament illustrations

(i)          9:7b-9 - Isaac vs. Ishmael: Both were physical sons of Abraham. Isaac (and not firstborn Ishmael) was chosen by God as the child of the covenant promise.

(ii)            9:10-13 - Jacob vs. Esau: Paul narrows the argument by using the example of twins born to Isaac and Rebekah. Before the twins were even born, or had done anything good or bad, God declared, "The older will serve the younger"- “Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated”. God’s choice is not based on human merit, but entirely of God’s grace and calling.

1.  9:6a ASSURANCE - God’s word has not failed! 

The people of whom everything in 9:4-5 is true are those who have by and large rejected the gospel about Jesus.  Humanly speaking this causes Paul unceasing anguish- so much that he wished that he could take their curse upon himself. The Lord God has endowed them with so many privileges – and look at the meagre returns! So, if most Jews reject God’s Messiah and God’s salvation, does it not mean that God’s word has failed?  Paul answers: No! It is not as though the word of God has failed, and then he makes this astonishing remark: 

2. 9:6b “For not all who are descended from Israel belong to Israel”. This is an astonishing statement. What is he saying here?  Simply this: The true definition of an Israelite is not linked to those belonging to a certain race group or to a certain religious group. To be sure, there is such an entity as political Israel, BUT within that realm there is a true Israel - a spiritual Israel.  

·       This is not the first time that Paul has said this - see Rom. 2:28-29

·       This distinction is also made by Jesus when He deals with the Jews of his time – see John 8:31-47. We will return to this shortly.

·       Historically, following the great divide under Rehoboam’s reign, the apostate part- the northern 10 tribes were called Israel. They had become an apostate nation worshipping at false altars.

This may be an appropriate moment to draw a parallel to the NT church. There are those who belong to the church and for them it is simply a tribal affiliation. They are cultural Christians because they are not Hindu or Moslem. And then there are those who truly love God and trust in God. They abide in His word (Jn 8:31). This is the true church.  

What makes them to be the true church?

3. Two Old Testament illustrations

(i) 9:7-9  “… not all are children of Abraham because they are his offspring, but through Isaac shall your offspring be named…”

Abraham’s first physical offspring was Ishmael. He was conceived by Sarah’s servant, Hagar.   And then he had another son, Isaac, born according to promise and in a miraculous way to his covenant wife, Sarah, who had been barren.  Not all the children of Abraham would be godly offspring. 

Now remember the text in John 8:31-47. The Jews prided themselves in being sons of Abraham. They saw themselves favoured by God on this ground. But Jesus told them in 8:44 whose seed they were: You are of your father the devil...  He is saying in effect, “You may be physical descendants of Abraham, but you are not   his spiritual offspring- if you were his offspring, you would be doing the works Abraham did… (8:39) . You are not trusting God. You are not trusting me; you are the devil’s offspring!  You have no grace in the soul !

9:8This means that it is not the children of the flesh (i.e. physical descendants) who are the   children of God, but the children of the promise are counted as offspring”. The Kingdom of God is not inherited by virtue of physical decent.  Growing up in a Christian culture, having Christian family attachments, church membership, baptism does not make you a member of God’s kingdom.  You must be born again from above – flesh gives birth to flesh – the Spirit gives birth to the spirit. You must be born again (John 3:1-8)!  

So, have the promises of God failed in regard to the Jews as a whole? No, because God had never planned to include every Jew in His saving purposes. This becomes even more apparent in the next (second) illustration, regarding the offspring of Isaac and Rebekah.

(ii)9: 10- 13:  Here we find that  not all are children of God, even if they come out of the same womb, even twins  (the example  of  Esau and Jacob)-   though they were not yet born and had done nothing either good or bad—in order that God's purpose of election might continue, not because of works but because of him who calls—she was told, “The older will serve the younger.” As it is written, “Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated.”

God chose Jacob in order that God’s purpose and election might stand. Even before birth God predestines (cf. 8:29,30) those who will receive His saving grace. Jacob was chosen. Esau was not. Therefore ultimately, because of God’s choice, His Word cannot fail. That is the logic of Paul’s argument.

Now for many this is a hard teaching.  But this is the plain teaching of Scripture.  This is Jesus’ teaching in John 10 (the Good Shepherd lays down His life for the sheep) and in John 17 where He prays for all those whom the Father has given to Him out of the world. This is also the pattern of the Old Testament. There is a clear doctrine of election that runs like a golden thread through the Bible.  

If you must disagree with the doctrine of election, you must argue with God’s Word. I remember that I did argue with Him, and God won! My heart was settled in this doctrine in 1987, in my second year at Seminary. I am fully convinced that my depravity is so deep that if God had not chosen me to believe, I would never have believed myself. NEVER! I can now truly sing of amazing grace that saved a wretch like me

Paul knows that this is hard doctrine for you and so he gives you proof from Scripture that the subjects whom he saves  are  weak.  Abraham was not a great man of faith to begin with. He was a pagan moon worshipper from Mesopotamia. By grace God called him, and He was given grace to believe. Isaac  was chosen against all   odds. Jacob and Esau had the same mother. Yet before they were born, before they had either done good or evil, God chose Jacob. Period!

Paul’s meaning is unmistakable.  God’s election is not based on anything in the elect themselves, but on the free mercy of God.  You may think this is unfair, and  Paul anticipates objections in 9:14 and 9:19 and so I must ask you to be patient and humble as we pursue this biblical doctrine in greater   detail next time.

The principle is this:  Salvation is by Grace, and not by Race: Membership in God's family is never an automatic inheritance through bloodlines. It is a gift of free grace. 

This  grace extended to undeserving sinners is the finished work of Jesus. This is  what we celebrate now as we come to the Lord’s table!

 



[1]  Matt 15:1-9;16:11-12; Matt 23 Jesus called them evil : Matt. 12:34,39,45 ; 16:4

[2] Matt 12:14

[3] E.g. Acts 13:46

Monday, June 1, 2026

ROMANS 9:1-5 "Spiritual Privileges Do Not Guarantee Salvation"

 


REVIEW 

Having shown that the whole world is guilty before God (1:18 – 3:20), Paul proceeds to show how people in general are made right (justified) with God. He shows us that all are saved in one way only: through faith in God’s way of salvation – believing in the Lord Jesus Christ (3:21ff).

But what about OT believers? Paul uses an example in Romans 4: How was Abraham saved (justified)? Answer: “Abraham believed God (i.e. all that God is and does) and it was counted to Him as righteousness “[1] (Rom.4:3 à Gen 15:6). Abraham’s faith in God is key! Faith in God, according to Romans 5 produces peace with God through faith in the Lord Jesus.  Through our union with Christ, we experience freedom from sin (Romans 6), whilst Romans 7 points to the reality of our internal struggle between the desire to do good and the persistent pull of sin. But Jesus is a real Saviour from sin (7:25) and therefore a Christian should expect real help in their struggles against sin. This is followed by  Romans 8 the great chapter on Christian assurance. The climax is found in 8:31-39: nothing in all creation  will be able  to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.

ROMANS  9

9:1-5: Paul in Soul Agony - the plight of his countrymen – the Jews.

Paul declares as if under oath: “I am speaking the truth in Christ – I am not lying; my conscience bears me witness in the Holy Spirit – that I have great sorrow and unceasing anguish in my heart. For I could wish that I myself were accursed and cut off from Christ for the sake of my brothers, my kinsmen according to the flesh. They are Israelites…”

Paul has spent a lot of time explaining why we need the gospel. He could move on from there to the practical application (i.e. How then shall we live?) which we shall find in Romans 12 and following. But he doesn’t go there yet!  

He must first unburden his heart concerning an important matter: His own people – the Jews.   

A brief reminder of who Paul was

Paul (Saul see  Acts 13:9) described himself as "of the people of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin" (Phil. 3:5).  Benjamin was the only son of Jacob born in the Promised Land. The tribe of Benjamin produced Israel’s first king (Saul). So Paul came from a distinguished line.  He was born and raised in the Diaspora in Tarsus in the Roman province of Cilicia (modern Turkey) and thus he was also a Roman citizen (Acts 22:25-29). Raised in a foreign culture he never forgot that he was a Jew. He was also raised in the theological framework of the Pharisees. In fact, he was trained by the respected  Gamaliel, a Pharisaic doctor of the  Jewish law  (Acts 22:3). He became a convert to Christ in Acts 9. He became the great apostle  to the gentile people, but he never forgot  that he was a Jew and  he never forgot his own people. 

This brings us to the point.  Paul was concerned about an issue which had confused many people in Paul’s day – namely the rejection of Israel by God, and the salvation of the gentiles.  

  • How was it possible that God could forsake His covenant people? 
  • Did God not make definite promises to Abraham, the father of the Jewish nation? 
  • Had God not favoured Israel above all the other nations (Deut. 14:1,2)?  
  • Had He not given them that which is listed here in 9:4 - the law, the covenants, the promises, the patriarchs, the temple … and above all, did He not send the Christ (promised Messiah), the Son of God to be born of Jewish descent?  
  • In the light of such an awesome heritage what could be the explanation for God’s rejection of Israel at this time? 
  • Why would He include and favour the gentiles at this time? 
It is this matter that Paul addresses in   Romans 9-11

A brief Outline of Romans 9-11 

(i)                      9:1-29: Paul shows that the rejection of the Jews was not a failure of God’s promise to save His people. The problem lies in the interpretation of what constitutes Abraham’s offspring and who the true Israel is. The key verses in this regard in 9:26-28 

(ii)                    9:30-10:21: Here Paul shows the reason why most of national Israel has rejected her God, and why many of the gentiles have received Christ the Jewish Messiah.  Christ became a stumbling block for the Jews, whilst many gentiles believed in Him and were saved.  The Jews, though zealous, were using the law as a standard of righteousness which did not match the righteousness that God requires for salvation. They were looking to the law and not to the gospel (Christ) for salvation. Now remember also that Paul has previously reminded us in Rom.2:28,29 that there is no actual advantage in being a Jew although he admits that the Jews do have an advantage, because this was the nation that God first revealed Himself to (3:2).  But apart from that fact, Jews are no better off than all the rest of the sinners of this world (3:9,10).  “There is no distinction: for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God…”  (3:22,23). Spiritual privileges do not guarantee salvation or favour.  This is all very important background to our understanding of Ch’s 9-11

(iii)                 11:1-36   Here Paul explains that Israel’s rejection is not total. Some Jews were being saved. Thank God that Jews in our own day are still coming to their Messiah- not in great numbers, but they are coming. We thank God for the work of the  Grace and Truth congregation in Israel[2], a vibrant Reformed Baptist congregation.  We have every reason to hope, expect, pray and labour to the end that many Jews will yet come to Christ before His coming.   

Back to 9:1-5

With that in mind we see Paul displaying his heart for his own people. And we want to learn from him.  Here is a man   who deeply loves his own people. He sees their plight. He understand their privileges and he desperately longs for their salvation. And so he wrestles in his heart before God, and he will help us to work through some profound theological issues in the process.

As we begin to work through Romans 9 we will have to deal with a range of significant questions.  

  • We will learn something about developing a real heart for lost people (9:1-5).  
  • We will work through issues such as, "Can God’s covenant promises fail?” (9:6-8). 
  • A major matter we need to settle in our minds is this:  “Is God unfair by choosing some and by bypassing others in salvation?” (9:9ff).   
These are all matters dealt with in Romans 9. 

Paul asserts that God is utterly able to keep His people. 

  • But what about Israel, the Jews as a whole?  
  • Howcome the nation to which   God has shown so much favour has gone so horribly astray? 
  • Why have they, by and large, not embraced Jesus the Jewish Messiah?

In fact, hasn’t this been a longstanding problem regarding national Israel?   The OT prophets had a similar problem in this regard. God promised Abraham to be the God of his descendants forever! However, many of Abraham’s offspring became faithless. What offspring is he referring to?  God promised Abraham that He would settle his descendants in a promised land – Canaan, forever, but the truth is that Israel could never really keep their country’s boundaries due to compromise.

And what about David? God promised David that he would never fail to have one of His offspring reign on His throne forever (e.g. Psalm 132:11,12.)  But then came the big split between Northern and Southern kingdom following Solomon’s death, and then the eventual collapse and exile of  both kingdom.   

Have God’s promises failed? 

You hear prophets like Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and some of the minor prophets like Habakkuk complaining, "How can God punish us by using our enemies?” 

Have God’s promises failed?  

The answer is this: “No, God’s promises have not failed. They are all answered in Jesus Christ the Messiah; and the question of the promised  land is all settled  in looking for that  better country and city that has foundations, whose designer and builder is God.”(Hebr.11:10). This is the  ultimate homeland  for every true believer. 

That being said,  this doesn’t lessen Paul’s agony as He thinks of His own people. May this burden be multiplied to us. Paul says, 

“I am speaking the truth in Christ—I am not lying; my conscience bears me witness in the Holy Spirit—that I have great sorrow and unceasing anguish in my heart. For I could wish that I myself were accursed and cut off from Christ for the sake of my brothers, my kinsmen according to the flesh. (9:1-3)

O the love Paul has for his people. He is so much for them, that he somehow wished that he could take their place as the accursed of God - for this is what they are without Christ – ACCURSED!  He wished that they might occupy his place in Christ and he theirs!

Paul of course knows that this is hypothetical.  He knows that this cannot happen. He cannot take their place, but it does show the intensity of his love for His own people – a people with unsurpassed favour from God. Again, I refer you to  a list of  eight remarkable privileges the Israelites were granted  in 9:4-5:

  • Adoption: Chosen as God's special children.
  • Glory: Experiencing the visible presence of God (the Shekinah).
  • The covenants: The binding promises God made to their ancestors.
  • The Law: Receiving God's righteous standard at Sinai.
  • The Worship: The sacrificial system designed to approach God.
  • The Promises: Prophecies pointing to the Messiah.
  • The Patriarchs: Descended from Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
  • The Messiah: Jesus Christ, who came from their physical lineage.

…but  they  are lost because they have failed to embrace the Messiah whom God has sent as the ONLY means of salvation. And because  of  THAT Paul's heart is in agony. 

Oh, for a heart like Paul. How did he get that heart?  

He certainly had received apostolic giftings  and  privileges, along with much suffering. But in all this Paul has experienced so much love and grace and mercy from God, that it has become a part of his being.  That is the wonderful thing about growing in grace. And the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ overflows in him, in particular for his people. And so he loves them, and he prays for them, so much that we find him repeating this desire  in Romans 10:1Brothers, my heart’s desire and prayer to God for the Israelites is that they may be saved.”

Where do we begin to have such a heart? 

  • We must go to God and ask Him to increase and deepen our desire for the salvation of our countrymen.  
  • We must deepen that desire as we learn this from the Bible, as we learn from Jesus Himself, and as we learn from the apostle Paul, who himself followed Christ.

APPLICATION

  • Pray  for South Africa; pray for your own people groups. 
  • South Africa has had a strong Christian heritage, but one is afraid  that we have lost  our first love. We pride ourselves in Christian things  and culture, but our love for  God Himself is dim.
  • We need to  develop a heart for those thousands and thousands of  professing Christians who warm the benches of our churches, but who have no living and real attachment to Christ; they are convinced but not converted. Don’t lose your heart for the nominal Christian. I have often thought that the church must get saved first! The central warning of this passage is that spiritual privilege does not guarantee salvation. A life can be filled with every religious, cultural, and moral advantage, but if it lacks personal faith in Jesus Christ, it ultimately misses the mark. The tragedy of Israel serves as an enduring reminder that heritage and outward participation cannot replace the inward reality of knowing the Messiah.

 

 

 

 

 



[1] See also Gal 3:6; The nature of Abraham’s faith is discussed in Hebr. 11:8-10;17-19.

 

Monday, May 25, 2026

ACTS 2:1- 21 “WHAT IS THE SIGNIFICANCE OF PENTECOST FOR TODAY”?

 


I want to draw our attention to the significance of the interventions of God in the history of the world, following the fall of man into a sinful state.  We are thinking here of the interventions whereby God Himself directly intervenes in the fallen world, first by sending His Son, Jesus Christ (the Messiah),  to save the world and then, secondly  by the sending of the Holy Spirit to remind the world of Jesus saving work.   

The Christian calendar follows these momentous events as we think about the birth, baptism,  crucifixion and death, resurrection, ascension of Christ the Messiah, followed by the descension of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost – 50 days after the Resurrection of Christ, 10 days after His Ascension.   These momentous events may be compressed into a period of about 35 years.  

With the cross and the resurrection weekend behind us and having remembered the Ascension of our Lord 10 days ago, we remember the next big event on the Christian calendar: Pentecost. All these are holy days on the Christian calendar. We have reduced them to holidays. Once again, significant words have suffered attrition over time. We speak about Christmas and Easter and Ascension holidays.  Pentecost has never been a public holiday in South Africa, since it always falls on a Sunday. In many countries, it is observed as a public holiday known as Whit Monday.[1]

 PENTECOST

 ‘Pentecost’   is taken from the Greek word for "50", because this feast occurred fifty days after the Passover. Pentecost, in Jewish circles is known as the Feast of the First-fruits or Feast of weeks, marking the completion of the barley harvest. 

It pleased God to send the Holy Spirit at this time to gather in the first fruits from among the nations presently in Jerusalem for this feast.  This would also be the start of a world-wide missionary movement bringing in a great world-wide harvest of believers, a people for God’s own glory- a work which continues in our own day, for the Holy Spirit who was sent from God has not been withdrawn!

Before His ascension the Lord Jesus had instructed the disciples not to leave Jerusalem but to wait for the promise of the Father … the Holy Spirit! Jesus said, “But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria and to the ends of the earth.” (Acts 1:8).

 ACTS 1:1-21

In Acts 2:1 we read, “When the day of Pentecost arrived[2]”. It was that day of which Jesus, and the prophets before Him e.g. Joel 2:28-32 and John the Baptist (Lk. 3:16) had spoken.  John the Baptist prophesied that Christ would baptize His disciples with the Spirit (Wind) and with Fire. That day had now finally and fully arrived.

The waiting disciples were together in prayer (Acts 2:1) when suddenly the Holy Spirit came by way of a sound (a rushing wind) and by sight (divided tongues of fire. Fire is a symbol of both cleansing and judgment). 

The words for wind and spirit are the same in the Greek language – Pneuma. The rushing wind is the Spirit – the Holy Spirit- universal and invisible, but undeniably present and powerful.

Those on whom the tongues of fire rested “were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance “(2:3,4). 

"Filled with the Spirit" is the same as being “baptized with the Spirit” (cf. 1:5).

The tongues[3] here are human languages.  Jews from various nations (see 2:9-11) were gathered here providentially for the Feast of First fruits.  The list contains nations east and west, north and south of Judea and each hears the message in their own languages. They are at first bewildered and then astonished that each person can hear the declaration of God's mighty works in his or her native language. Each one can speak a foreign language without having previously learned it. Each one present is able to hear the gospel in their own tongue. This is Babel (Genesis 11:9) reversed. "What does this mean?" (2:12) is a logical question to this phenomenon.  Some glibly assume that these people are drunk (2:13,15).   This causes quite a commotion.

 The Explanation

In 2:14- 21 Peter explains what was seen and heard. He loses no time to direct his hearer’s attention to Joel 2:28-32. He shows them that this text is the fulfilment of what they see happening before their very eyes. 

1. The Holy Spirit who in the OT was given to specific individuals—such as kings, prophets, or judge, for limited times and specific tasks is now poured out on all flesh – men and women alike.

2. While Joel uses the phrase "afterward" (Joel 2:28), Peter intentionally translates it in Acts 2:17 as "in the last days." Pentecost marks the official beginning of the final era of redemptive history. The "last days" period is the current church age, spanning from Jesus's first coming and the outpouring of the Spirit until His second coming.

3. Joel connects the outpouring of the Spirit directly with prophetic activity: "they shall prophesy... see visions... dream dreams."  Keep in mind that this must all be connected to the truth of the gospel – not any prophecy, not any vision, not any dream – the gospel must be in it!   

At Pentecost, this happened immediately when the disciples were enabled to declare the gospel in languages they had never learned. The Holy Spirit enabled them.  

4. Joel’s prophecy concludes with a wonderful promise: "everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved."  The door of salvation was opened to Jews and Gentiles alike. This continues  until the end of time before the Lord returns. That time will be preceded by wonders in the heavens above and signs on the earth below ( Acts 2:19-20 cf.  Luke 21:25,26)

So far for our text. What is the significance of Pentecost for today?

 THE SIGNIFICANCE OF PENTECOST

 1. Pentecost is another confirmation that God is acting in this world.  God has acted in sending His Son. He continues to act by the Holy Spirit who brings all that Christ has taught to the church’s remembrance (Jn 14:26). The sovereign Spirit is constantly at work. Why does this need to be stressed?  We need to be reminded that God has not abdicated His work. We do not think that we must help Him out or manipulate situations.  I will say something in point 5 about that when I shall remind us that the Holy Spirit cannot be turned into a franchise.  

Pentecost reminds us that God’s work – and supremely the church begins with God and is sustained by God. 

Waiting on Him in prayer is key. 

Working what He commands in the Scripture is key.   

Dear church, let us learn to keep in step with the Sovereign Spirit (Gal. 5:25). “I say walk by the Spirit and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh” (Gal. 5:16). 

Remember that God is working in the world by His Spirit!   

 2.  Pentecost is all about Jesus and His work!  Jesus Christ is the main point of Peter's Pentecost sermon (see 2:22ff). The climactic event is Christ's exaltation (2: 33-36).  The Holy Spirit constantly draws our attention to Jesus and reminds us that we are to be His witnesses (Acts 1:8). This is a huge work and for this reason the disciples needed power for witnessing.  Pentecost is the amplified  testimony  of the Holy Spirit working in and  through ordinary people, men and women testifying to the Lord Jesus Christ in accordance with 2:17. It was the Holy Spirit’s  power by Peter’s  preaching  Christ that brought 3000  souls  into the kingdom in one day (2:41). The Holy Spirit was there to accelerate the work of God in the world.  Supremely then Pentecost reminds us that the Holy Spirit  is  there to point us to Jesus  (John 16:13,14).

 3. Pentecost is the inauguration of the church's gospel witness to the whole world. The effect of the Spirit's coming would be that   those that were converted would be His witnesses to the end of the earth.  This typically happened when the people   from the nations present in Jerusalem at the Feast of First fruits /Pentecost heard the gospel in their own language and were converted and in turn took this gospel out into their respective worlds. This remains our great commission. It forms part of RRCC’s vision.

 4. Pentecost  leads to the formation of the church in the world. Those that are converted through the Spirit empowered gospel witness join the church. The Bible knows nothing of church-less believers. The true church is made up of the assembly of God’s saved people from among the Jews and the gentiles (Eph. 3:1-11). Every local church ought to be a microcosm of that great reality. To that end we labour and strive at RRCC. The church is the people of God, indwelt by the Spirit of God. She is God’s plan, God’s missionary movement to bring this gospel about Jesus to the nations. 

5.  A WARNING : Pentecost is not a franchise – not a monopoly of the Holy Spirit- not the domain of certain churches. There has been a tendency to get hold of the Spirit’s power and to monopolize Him, like the story of Simon Magus in Acts 8:19 who wanted to buy the power of the Holy Spirit from the apostles. He thought of them as the franchise holders. For this he received a stern rebuke from Peter. 

We have somehow been led to believe  that  living  in the days of the outpoured Spirit   has brought us an  intensification of spiritual experience,  and of spiritual insight, and  a heightening of spiritual power. The church is constantly bombarded with this by false teachers who unsettle our hearts, always making us feel that we have too little of God’s new franchise now in the hands of these super apostles as Paul called them (2 Cor 11:5). I am also afraid that theories of superior sanctification and  accelerated holiness  as a result of a second experience of the Holy Spirit  have confused Christians  and have drawn us away from  focusing on God’s work in the world.

Certain churches and teachers teach  that we do not have the Holy Spirit if we have not experienced a so called ‘baptism of the Holy Spirit'  – an experience subsequent to conversion.  You are frowned upon in certain circles  if you have not spoken in tongues , if you have not participated in ecstatic behavior in worship, if you have not received  the laying on of hands of a super apostle, if you have not been  to deliverance services or  healing services, if you have not been  in a service that is 'loud'  by way of amplification,  huge TV screens, dazzling light effects, smoke machines etc. 

All these things remind us of the  frenzied activities of the prophets of Baal when contrasted with the calm, prayerful  spirit of  Elijah in 1 Kings 18:20-40. Sadly, the work and the gifts of the Holy Spirit have been turned into man- manipulated fiasco in many a modern church! 

And much of it is trading on the spiritual laziness of Christians who want to have  an instant experience rather than the daily  pursuit of diligent trust in God.  

I remind you that we do not have too little of God!  His grace  is sufficient for every situation. 

  • But we do have too little faith! And we must ask God for it. 
  • We do have too little obedience, too little time, too many of our own agendas that constantly replace our devotion to God! 
The Holy Spirit convicts us of these sins (John 16:8). And we must constantly repent before God of it. We note that  Peter will struggle with cowardice after Pentecost as before; Ananias and Sapphira will deceive and false doctrine will trouble the church in Corinth, Galatia and throughout history!  We must learn to rest in Christ’s finished work for us – for this we do not need a  franchise Christianity. We need to believe the Bible and  do what it says, and our God will provide all our need according to His riches in glory!

 So, what was Pentecost?

1.     The historical Pentecostal event  was an initiating event. As such it is unique and unrepeatable. It was a great miracle authenticating the birth, death, resurrection and exaltation of Jesus Christ.  All God's people  were freed to speak about the  gospel of God.

2.       It was an equipping and empowering of the church for its work of bearing witness to the Lord Jesus Christ in the world (Acts 1:8) with  the help of the poured out Spirit. In that sense it was a new work. Before Pentecost the church was largely confined to the Jews. Now, because of Pentecost the church spans the world. This work continues until Jesus returns. And we are called in the power of the Holy Spirit to continue to do the work of proclaiming the  gospel of God in this world. You will never have to worry about   spiritual power for the task at hand. If you are born again, you have all God’s authority and power with you, and according to the gifting with which God has equipped you. You speak. He does the rest. Sometimes 3000 converts in a day in that corner of God’s vineyard, sometimes one a year in another vineyard!  Still the  angels rejoice when a single sinner  comes home ! Amen

 



[1] The Monday after Pentecost is a public holiday in: Andorra, Antigua and Barbuda, Anguilla, Austria, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belgium, Benin, The British Virgin Islands, Central African Republic, Republic of Congo, Cyprus, Denmark, Dominica, France, Gabon, Germany, Greece, Grenada, Hungary, Iceland, Ivory Coast, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Madagascar, Monaco, Montserrat, The Netherlands, Norway, Romania, Saint Lucia, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Senegal, Solomon Islands, Switzerland, Togo and Ukraine.[3] In many of these countries, Whit Monday is known as "the second day of Pentecost" or "the second Whitsun" [ SOURCE: Wikipedia]

[2] sumplerousthai,   lit ‘ to fill completely  ‘ [NIV came;  KJV ‘ fully come’ ]; see also Lk 9:51)

[3] γλσσα (glōssa);  plural form γλσσαι (glōssai). In Acts 2, the word represents known languages

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

ROMANS 8:33 -39 “WHO SHALL SEPARATE US FROM THE LOVE OF JESUS”?

 


Romans 8:31 is one of the most comforting verses in the Bible: “If God is for us who can be against us”?   It is a powerful statement on Christian assurance.

Why do we need assurance? 

We need assurance when we are unsure or insecure. Insecurity is a huge human problem. A massive industry has been spawned to help our insecurity or lack of assurance. 

Why?

The Bible says that our identity is derived from God, who has created us in His image (Genesis 1&2). Furthermore, the Bible says that the fall of man into sin (Genesis 3) has severed mankind from their Creator. Like Cain  we have become restless wanderers (Genesis 4). We have become unsure of ourselves, because our true identity, our true purpose, our  true origin is obscured.  We are no longer sure who we are.  Our soul (which is a God-shaped vacuum) cries out, Who am I? What am I here for? Where am I going?  

Our fallenness generally causes us to look for answers in the wrong areas, and while we may find temporary relief in that guru’s teaching, or in various wellness strategies, and in various therapies, the ultimate questions won’t leave us alone. Augustine (AD 354-430)   the North African Church father correctly  concluded , “Oh Lord our hearts are restless until they are found in you[1].”

Ultimate assurance can only come from God, the One who  has made you and I. 

Following Paul’s great exposition on the nature of the fall and the effects of sin upon us (that which produces disconnectedness and ultimately lack of assurance / lack of hope/ purpose), he provides us with the remedy - the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The gospel restores assurance, by restoring us to a God centered view of life.  This is a process called sanctification.  

One great reason (there are others) why many Christians lack assurance is that they do not take the Bible, and the gospel in particular,  to heart. Their  hearts may be saved, but the mind is not engaged, and the  soul is not fed on the richest of foods. They do not meditate on  the  precepts of Scripture. They have not learned to preach the gospel to themselves. The gospel takes us into the arms of  Jesus, and once you are with Jesus, you are safe!  His presence and  His Word is  a balm to our soul.  

If you want to learn about Christian assurance get to terms with Romans 8.  Romans  8:31-39 in particular   is  very affirming.   In summary we learn: 

i.                         8:31 Who can be against  God’s people?  ANSWER: No conceivable power can stand against God

ii.                       8:32 If God gave us His very best – Christ (Is that enough?)  ANSWER: will He not give us all things?  

iii.                    8:33,34 Who can bring any charge against, or condemn God’s people: ANSWER – If you are justified by God no one can bring any charge against you. 

iv.                    8:35-39 Who can separate a believer from the love of Christ? ANSWER: “nothing will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord”. (repeated in 8:39)

By means of these 4 questions and affirmations Paul summarizes the main teachings of his letter and in so doing he is dealing with the doctrine of assurance of salvation.  

If  Romans 8 is that great majestic mountain, called Assurance, then 8:31-40 is the mountain peak.

THE 4TH QUESTION CONSIDERED: WHO SHALL SEPARATE US FROM THE LOVE OF CHRIST?

It is useful to consider the times in which this letter was written. The letter was written in AD 57.  Very soon, in AD 64 (7 years later) these Roman Christians were going to face a severe persecution under the Roman emperor Nero.  

In AD 64 Rome suffered a terrible fire that burned for six days and seven nights, destroying  almost three quarters of the city.  Rome then was densely populated and not prepared to effectively deal with large scale disasters, including fires. Such an event was inevitable. Rumour also had it that Nero may have set fire to the city, because he wanted to rebuild the city.    According to Tacitus[2], a Roman historian, Nero then blamed the Christian community for the fire. This began the first large scale persecution of the Roman state against Christians.  Many Christians were  put to death in the most horrific manner, and even for the amusement of the citizens of Rome.  Their dead bodies were covered in pitch and used as human torches.

You will appreciate that people who suffer such trials need strong assurance that God indeed loves them!

3  ASSURANCES  ABOUT THE LOVE OF GOD IN TIMES OF TRIAL

1.       8:35 No tribulation, distress, persecution, famine, nakedness, danger, sword will separate us from the love of Christ.

The emphasis here (and in the rest of the text) is on Christ’s love (which is synonymous with God’s love – cf.  8:31,32) for His people.   Truly, if our assurance, or our faith depended on our love to Christ, I should very much doubt whether I could withstand any of those circumstances described here. I remind you that Peter did not manage to withstand the temptation to disown Christ, while He was interrogated by the Sanhedrin (Jn 18:15ff).To his credit, it grieved him bitterly (Matt 26:75; Lk. 22:62; Mk 14:72), and Jesus spend good time with Peter in John 21 to reassure  Peter of His love for him. 

In fact, none of the disciples stood up for Jesus when He was on trial. They all had deserted Him Christ in His hour of trial (Matt. 26:56). But Jesus loved them to the end. 

Paul experienced desertion – see 2 Timothy 4:16. In response to strong opposition to the gospel, probably in Ephesus, Paul says, “At my first defense no one came to stand by me, but all deserted me… but the Lord stood by me and strengthened me…”.  At that time  Paul received an inner assurance that His Lord was with him in this forsaken moment.

The point is this. We are being kept by virtue of His love for us, and on the basis of this fact we continue; it is on the basis of Christ’s love for us that we are secure.  Nothing   can separate Christ’s sheep from His love (see John 10:27-30 & 17:12). His keeping power is real.     

Paul reminds us here of seven difficult situations in which Christ's love is sufficient to keep us:  tribulation (outward pressures), distress or inner turmoil (inward pressures); persecution; famine, nakedness, danger, sword. Paul himself knew about all these experiences. For a catalogue of his sufferings see 2 Corinthians 11:23ff

According to early Christian tradition and historical records, Paul was killed by beheading in Rome during the reign of the Roman Emperor Nero around AD 64.  It is this same Paul that says that none of these things can separate us from the love of God. Even death, our worst enemy cannot do that.  Death will usher the believer into God’s presence. Christ – His love - is ours in life and death. That is the first thing that Paul wants us to understand.

2.           8:36 -37 Christians are more than conquerors in all these things

We begin with 8:36 : “for His sake we are being put to death all day long. Like sheep we are being led to the slaughter."  This is a quotation from Psalm 44:22. This Psalm reminds us that God’s people always have suffered much in every generation.  When Paul wrote in AD 57 this would soon (i.e.  within 7 years) be true of himself and many Christians he was writing to.

I remind you that persecution with death as a consequence is not a past thing for most Christians in our world. According to Open Doors[3], a Christian monitor of current persecution, 1 in 7 Christians experience persecution in the world.1 in 5 Christians in Africa experience persecution!  North Korea, Somalia, Yemen, Sudan and Eritrea are the top 5 persecutors of Christians. Nigeria is #7. Five of 10 persecuting nations are on African soil!  Remember your brothers and sisters who are currently sharing in the fellowship of His sufferings.

Back to Paul. He had been involved in the persecution of Christians. When the ascended Lord Jesus had met him on the road to Damascus, He did not say, "Saul, Saul, why do you persecute my Christian people? “He said, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?"  The persecution of believers was ultimately a persecution of Christ. Believers are in Christ and therefore they are united to Him. Their sufferings are His sufferings, and His sufferings are our sufferings. Suffering persecution is a result of our union with Christ. Even in countries like ours where we are not physically killed, we suffer when we stand for the truth as it is in Jesus. In my calling as a pastor I  have experienced that, and have suffered in my soul on account of  numerous hard-hearted men and women. 

Be that as it may.  Paul wants us  to know that  in our resisting of sin and temptation and of many adversaries  we are conquerors, in fact,  MORE than conquerors. 

We are not simply survivors.  We are more than conquerors.

Polycarp (69 – 155 AD) the  bishop of Smyrna (now Izmir in Turkey), had been a disciple of the apostle John. In the reign of the Roman Caesar Marcus Aurelius he was arrested for being a Christian.  He was 86 years old. The Roman officials urged him to save his life by denying Christ and confessing Caesar as god. He famously replied, "Eighty-six years I have served him, and he never did me any wrong. How can I blaspheme my King who saved me?" He was sentenced to be burned. His death and the surrounding circumstances were a remarkable testimony. His was the death of more than a conqueror.  Like the martyr Stephen in Acts 7 he exhibited the glory of God in death.  It is not  his remarkable courage  in the face of death;  he was  a man in God’s hand and the grace of God worked in His trial. Nothing separated him from the love of Jesus. In death he conquered the grave. He is with Jesus. 

It is true that not every person responds like this.  We know people who have gone through terrible trials, and these trials have made them bitter, angry and cynical.  Trials do not always make us better people. But here is the assurance - for those who rest in Christ, and who keep His word – those He will also keep from (or in)  the hour of trial (Revelation 3:10 – Philadelphia).  He makes them more than conquerors.

3.        8:37-39: Not death nor life, not angels nor rulers etc. can separate us from God’s love. 

No time bound event (death/life), no heavenly powers (angels/rulers/things present/ things to come/ powers) no distance (height/depth), nothing in all creation can separate us from the love of God, which is ours in Jesus Christ.  He repeats what he has said before,  in 8:35. Paul expresses here a strong, unshakable confidence in Christ’s love. He says, “I am sure of it”!  

Dear Christian, 

The Word of God teaches us that there is more to life than meets the eye. 

Looking at life at face value can be intimidating, but it is not reality. Looking at life through the lens of Scripture is reality.  The book of Job confirms that. The book of Daniel and Ezekiel and the book of Revelation confirm that. Jesus confirms that in the gospels.   

How do you evaluate reality - your life events?  A pastor once he talked to a man, and he wanted to see if he had any spiritual realities. They were sitting in a church building.  He asked him:  "What you see in this room?" The man said, "I see hymnals, pews, a communion table, a pulpit." 

"What else do you see?" "I see an organ, windows, a balcony." The pastor asked, "Is that all you see?" And the man said "Yes!".  The pastor said, said, "I’ll tell you what I see. I see powers and principalities and forces in high places at work.  And I see a man  not at peace with his realities..."  In so doing he was reminding the man that there are greater realities at work – and they are as real as the chair you’re sitting on! Many things we do not see do in fact exist.    God's love exists. And this love is able to keep you in all situations, even worst case scenarios, such as Polycarp experienced.  Of that you may be sure.

Dear believer, may God with the help of His Word and the Holy Spirit give you new  eyes to see true reality. That will provide you with a new level of assurance, which you shall need as you face your unique trials in the world. May your confidence be rooted in the love of Christ for you. May you be helped by the Holy Spirit Himself as you look to Jesus. 

Rest in Him.  

Let Him be your ultimate assurance. Amen

 



[1] Augustine of Hippo, Confessions, 1,1.5

[2] Publius Cornelius Tacitus,( c.AD 56 c.120) was a Roman historian and politician. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest Roman historians by modern scholars. SOURCE – Wikipedia

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