From time to time this important
question may arise in our minds: Can I be sure that I will not be condemned when I shall stand one
day before the judgment seat of God?
Atheists and
Agnostics
will say – that’s not a problem for me, since I don’t believe in God; I have
no sense of accountability to God.
Universalists will say – Since God
loves everyone and will allow no one to perish since Christ has died for the
sins of the whole world (whether they know it or not), there’s no need
to worry.
But the person that reads the Bible cannot come to such a conclusion, since they can see from a plain reading that (i) God is holy (ii) man is sinful (iii) God, the Creator will hold man accountable for His sin (iv) God has provided a Redeemer (v) but only for those that confess their sin and turn to Him.
We left Romans 7 with the apostle Paul, a mature believer in Christ seeing all this, and crying out, “Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?” He is struck by the holiness of God and the sinfulness of sin, and he finds himself begging for an answer to this dilemma: How can I, a wretched sinner stand before this holy God? Thankfully, the answer is not slow in coming. It comes in 7:25, “Thanks be to God - through Jesus Christ our Lord!”
In Romans 8 we come to one of the most thrilling chapters in the whole
Bible. The outcome of this chapter will
be this thought: What a great salvation we have in Christ!
Romans 8 begins with the statement of his theme in 8:1 - “There
is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus”. In the remaining 38 verses, he works out that
statement
In 8:1-4 we learn three things that are greatly
liberating
1. 8: 1 - 2 THE PRESENCE OF SIN IN
OUR LIVES IS NOT THE FINAL STORY
8:1,2 There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are
in Christ Jesus. For the law of the
Spirit of life has set you free
in Christ Jesus from the law of sin and
death.
The first liberating reality we learn is that the
presence of sin in a believer’s life is not the final story. The presence and reality of sin in a
believer’s life is undeniable. We have
seen this in Romans 3:9-20 and we
have seen how Paul wrestles with this experience of sin in Romans 7:13 -24. And if he had ended there, this would be a most
depressing conclusion.
But now Paul wants us to see that the
presence and reality of sin in our lives (Paul calls it ‘the law of sin’ ) is not the whole
story. It certainly is not the final
story.
He shows us that there is another,
much greater law at work in the believer’s life. He calls it ‘the
law of the Spirit of life’.
When you become a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ you are born again
through the regenerating power of the Holy Spirit (John 3:1-8). You have received the righteousness of God (Rom.
3:21). You are justified by
grace through faith in Jesus (Rom
3:24,26,28; 5:1,9). Justification means being ‘right with God’. The great Judge of the Universe has declared
you ‘not guilty‘. And He does this on the basis of the life of His Divine Son,
in whom you have believed, and trusted. He has paid the price of your sin and
guilt. This is the law of life which has set you free in Christ Jesus from
the law of sin and death.
But in chapter 7 we have seen that
the law of sin (and death) is still at work in the believer. So how can these
two laws, “the law of the Spirit of life” and “the law of sin and
death” be at work within us?
(i)
The Bible teaches us here that this is so
(ii)
Our experience teaches us that this is so. In your experience
you find this constant conflict. If you have been a Christian for any length of
time you will have said something like this, “I am a Christian. I want to be
like Jesus, but I find that I struggle with sin - sometimes even with serious
sin. What can I do? Am I still a Christian when sin overcomes me?” Worse
still, some think at this point, “Have I lost my salvation”?
Here is Paul’s answer following his
struggle in Chapter 7: “There is therefore now no condemnation for those
that are in Christ Jesus. For the law of the spirit of life in Christ
Jesus has set you free from the
law of sin and death."
You will now have to learn not to
base your trust in your feelings, but in facts. You will need to base your trust in the
lifegiving work of the Spirit, who incidentally has just convicted you of your
sin, and has made you feel despondent and sorrowful. This is not a normal
pattern with an unconverted person. So,
you have sinned! Will this sin then undo
your salvation? No! Why? Because the law
of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus is greater than the law of sin and
death. A Christian is not someone who
has become incapable of sinning. A Christian is someone whose sin has been
completely dealt with by Christ.
The law of the Spirit
> than the law of sin and death
2. 8:3 A POWERFUL SAVIOUR DEALS
EFFECTIVELY WITH SIN
“For God has done what the
law, weakened by the flesh, could not do. By sending his own Son in the
likeness of sinful flesh and for sin, he condemned sin in the flesh”,
The second liberating reality is best expressed in four propositions:
4 Realities
a. “For God has done what the
law, weakened by the flesh, could not do for you:
Your freedom has come to you because of what God has done. Your sinful
flesh weakens you considerably – so much so that you cannot overcome sin by
yourself. GOD TAKES INITIATIVE
b. "God did this by
sending His own Son". The great solution to your sin problem- that which stands
between you and your holy Creator is Jesus! How did God do this? He sent His own Son. He is Jesus, the eternal Son of God (John
1:1). He sent the eternal Jesus via a miraculous supernatural conception into
Mary’s womb, born in the likeness of a man, a human baby, fully experiencing
life in a fallen world, yet remaining without sin, dying as the sinless Lamb of
God, bearing away the sin of those who will look to Him and trust Him for His
work on their behalf. This is simply
stupendous: The God who created mankind in His image –first represented in Adam
and Eve, who fell into a state of sin in Genesis 3, that Creator God sends
another Adam – a perfect man into this world. GOD’S SOLUTION: HIS SON –
JESUS CHRIST
c. “By sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh“: Here are two important truths about Jesus:
(i) Jesus experienced all the sin and weaknesses common to human beings living in a fallen world, and
(ii) at the same time, He never sinned. His nature, His
humanity was not fallen. The idea that Jesus became fallen human being is a
heresy. The phrase “in the likeness
of sinful flesh” does not mean that He became involved in acts of sin. True, He became sin for us, but the
text in 2 Cor 5:21 reads, “For
our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might
become the righteousness of God.” He became sin in the sense that He became
our sin- bearer, but Jesus was never inherently sinful. In the likeness of sinful flesh simply
affirms that God brought His Son into the closest possible relation to us, yet
without sin.
Consider also this: “By sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful
flesh, and for sin (or as
a sin offering)." JESUS
CHRIST – OUR HUMAN SINLESS SIN-BEARER
And therefore…
d. “he condemned sin in the
flesh“… Being sinless meant that He could kill sin!
He is greater than sin. Therefore, He has condemned sin in the flesh. He has
freed us from its enslaving power. That is amazing news. JESUS’
DEATH EFFECTIVELY DEALS WITH OUR
SIN- PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE
Christ in whom we trust
> is greater than all our sin
Here are four compelling reasons proving that we must rest entirely in Christ’s finished work.
My greatest challenge is not to look at myself to closely. Too much introspection without looking to Christ will end in becoming spiritually depressed. Robert Murray MÇheyne (1813-1843), a Scottish pastor, wisely counselled, "For every look at yourself, take ten looks at Christ" . We must spend more time reflecting on Jesus person and work - resting in Christ's grace and sufficiency. Say frequently to yourself, Christ has done this for me and this is what I cling to. If you say, “but I don’t feel as if I’m free from the power of sin”, then Paul says to you, read these words again!
3. 8:4 CHRIST IN US FULFILLS THE RIGHTEOUS REQUIREMENT OF THE LAW
“… in
order that the righteous requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us, who
walk not according to the flesh but according to the Spirit.
This text stands in relation to 8:3 and must be understood in that context.
The third liberating reality rests in the fact that the law is completed in Christ. Therefore we do not rest in the law. We rest in Christ. When we walk according to the Spirit and in Christ, the righteous requirement of the law is fulfilled in us.
The result? No more condemnation!
Christ = the end and fulfilment of the law
Your
Lord Jesus’ victory over sin – even your sin, liberates you from the law of sin which
constantly shouts, guilty, guilty, guilty … and that is true of course, for the law is righteous in its requirements,
and holy and true.
BUT, it
tells you MORE SO, that the law of sin
has been completed and superseded in Christ Jesus. This is the law of the
Spirit of life, and it has set you free from the law of sin and death-
so called because the law in itself cannot save you. It can only accuse you.
But the
law of the Spirit drives you to Christ. He is the end of the law (Rom
10:4) and the fulfilment of the law. You must walk in that law. He is
the living center from which you must
live.
This
is the promise given to Jeremiah 31:33
and Ezekiel 11:19-20, 36:26,27, the anticipation of the new
covenant where God undertakes to give
His people a new heart and a new spirit. That new heart is driven by love for
your Saviour. All your future obedience flows from that relationship.
Have
you received THAT heart?
In the following verses from 8:5 onwards we will see how that new heart manifests itself in the way we live our lives in this world.
For this we
will have to wait for next time we meet.


