©2002 Larry Huntsperger Peninsula Bible Fellowship
|
1/13/02 |
The Body Battle |
Romans 12:1 |
1/13/02
The Body Battle
ROM 12:1 I urge you therefore, brethren, by the mercies
of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God,
which is your spiritual service of worship.
ROM 12:2 And do not be conformed to this world, but be
transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what the will of
God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.
These are the words Paul uses
to open the 4th
and final section
of his
letter to the Romans.
It is a section designed to be supremely practical in
nature,
a section in
which Paul takes the principles he has given us
in the
first 11 chapters
and shows us how those principles
will play out in our daily lives
if we have
understood them correctly.
But it is far more than just that.
It is Paul’s
presentation
of 6
essential principles
that
govern life within the family of God.
This is Paul’s manual for the local church.
No matter what
culture we may live in,
no matter
what type of church government may be in operation,
no
matter how large
or
how small the group may be,
if these principles are understood
and are being
applied within the group,
there will
be life,
and
power,
and
health.
And if these principles are not being applied,
no matter how big
the building,
or how
large the budget,
or
how many may be on staff,
or
how full the place is on Sunday mornings,
it is nothing
more than man-made religion
being
cranked out under the banner of Jesus Christ.
Back in my college days,
way back in the
60's,
the
Christian world in the United States
went
through a tremendous amount of upheaval.
The youth culture looked at most of the established
religious institutions
and found them
completely out of touch with what was happening around them,
and
incapable of offering real answers
to
many of the very real questions facing our nation.
And during that time
as churches
scrambled to try to reconnect
with the
needs of the society around them,
I can remember a
tremendous amount of talk
about the
need to become “a true New Testament Church”.
None of us had any clear idea what that meant,
but whenever some
authoritative voice declared that this group,
or that
group
was
“a true New Testament Church”,
we would all go trotting over to see what it looked like.
At the time
I can remember
thinking
that
becoming a “New Testament Church”
must
have something to do with the governmental structure of the thing.
Instead of the monthly business meeting that I was
accustomed to
in which the will
of God
and the
mind of the Holy Spirit
were determined on the basis of a 51% majority,
I figured a true
New Testament Church
must have
Elders that really functioned as Elders,
and
deacons like those in the book of Acts,
and
maybe even a prophet here and there
and
an apostle or two.
What I did not understand then,
and would not
come to understand for a number of years,
is that it
was not the structure,
the
form that separated the early Christians
from those of us
who have followed after them.
It was just two things -
the way they
related to their Lord,
and the way
they related to one another.
It never has been about our finding the “right” structure,
it’s been about
us finding the right relationship with our Lord,
and with
our fellow Christians.
And, as we move into Paul’s six principles
for life within
the Body of Christ
we are
going to discover that all six of these principles
can effectively
and powerfully be applied
within
virtually any church form or structure in existence.
None of them need board approval
or a solid
majority vote on the part of the congregation
in order
for us to apply them daily
in
our personal walk with the King.
Once again we have been deceived.
We live in a
religious world
that has
convinced us what we need for our spiritual success is the perfect church,
the church that
can meet all our needs,
and supply
us with everything necessary for our life,
and
growth,
and
spiritual vitality.
But what we really need
is not the right
church,
but rather
the right relationship
with our God
and with one
another
within
whatever church structure we happen to be.
The principles Paul gives us
in this last
section of his letter to the Roman Christians
are given
to equip us with the knowledge we need
to
make that a daily reality in our lives.
OK, just another few words of background
for those of you
who may be new to this study -
Paul wrote
the book of Romans
in
order to provide his readers
with
the answers to 4 crucial questions about Christianity.
1. Why was Christ needed (1:18-3:20).
2. What is a Christian? (3:21-8:39)
3. What happens with the Nation of Israel in the light of
God’s creation of the Church? (chapters 9-11)
4. What are the key principles governing life within the
family of God? (chapters 12-16)
And with that as a foundation to help get us into it,
lets plunge into
that first principle.
We’ll call this first principle “Understanding the battle we
fight”,
and Paul lays out
for us
the nature
of that battle in 12:1
and
the strategy for victory in 12:2.
And here is where it all starts:
ROM 12:1 I urge you therefore, brethren, by the mercies
of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God,
which is your spiritual service of worship.
Those words were written by Paul
3/4 of the way
through this letter.
They are words deeply rooted
in several
crucial passages
that
appeared earlier in this letter,
and if we were to attempt to rip 12:1
out of the
context of what has come before
we would,
at the same time,
forever
destroy the power
and
the tremendous significance
of
what Paul gives us in these first two verses of chapter 12.
If it is ripped out of context
what we end up
with
is little
more than a call
to
try to flesh out the Christian life
with
some kind of all-consuming strength of will and determination.
If we pull it out of context,
when Paul calls
us to offer our bodies as a living and holy sacrifice,
it sounds
as if he is using the word “bodies”
as a
term to describe “our total selves”.
It sounds like the closing cry
of some well
meaning
by severely
misguided teen evangelist
who ends his rally
with a call for
his listeners to “lay it all on the alter...
Give God your
time!
Give God
your money!
Give
God your dating life!
Give
God your future!
Give
God your sexuality!
Lay it all on the alter for Him
and never pick it
up again!
I urge you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to
present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is
your spiritual service of worship.”
It sounds great,
and if it worked,
if that
approach could take us from where we are
to where we need to be,
I’d be the first
in line to give the cry.
But the truth is,
rather than
leading us into true life and maturity in the Spirit,
it leads us
into a futile, frantic attempt
to
crank out the life of God
through
the power of the flesh.
Do you want to see this approach and its end results
in the life of
Peter?
Jesus ended His last meal with His disciples
by telling them
that He was going to be struck down
and all of
them would desert Him.
Peter responded to that statement with these words:
MAT 26:33 But Peter answered and said to Him, "Even
though all may fall away because of You, I will never fall away!"
Now, doesn’t it seem
like Jesus would
have responded to that bold affirmation from Peter
by saying
something like, “Well done, Peter! Give
it your best shot.
I’m
proud of you for your vow of commitment and determination!”
Do you know what He actually said?
MAT 26:34 Jesus said to him, "Truly I say to you
that this very night, before a cock crows, you shall deny Me three times."
Now, Peter came right back at Him and declared, “Even if
I have to die with You, I will not deny You...”,
but why
didn’t Jesus affirm Peter in his bold pledge of faithfulness?
Because He knew it was a pledge
rooted in his
emotions,
based upon
his flesh abilities to pull it off.
And as such it was utterly worthless.
JOH 6:63 "It is the Spirit who gives life; the flesh
profits nothing...”
And less than eight hours later
when a bystander
accused Peter
of being
one of Jesus’ disciples
we hear Peter curse and swear
and proclaim to
the world,
not just
once, but 3 times,
“I do not know the Man!!”
When Paul says,
I urge you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to
present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is
your spiritual service of worship...,
he is not
attempting to drum up
some
well-intended flesh-based commitment to give God our all.
He is giving us a clear,
precise
explanation
of where
the resistance to the life of Christ within us will come from
and
how we can go about overcoming that resistance.
And it is crucial for us to notice
both what Paul
says here,
and what He
does NOT say.
He does not call us to “present our lives” to Christ.
He does not call
us to “give our hearts” to Christ.
He does not
urge us to “give ourselves” to Christ.
He calls us to “present our bodies”
as a living and
holy sacrifice.
And here,
just as in Romans
7
when he
talked about the war that is raging in the “members of my body”,
he is talking
about our literal,
physical,
flesh
and blood bodies.
Now, those of you who have been around here for a while
know where we’re
going with this thing,
but there
is simply no other way
for
us to correctly understand Paul’s words to us in Romans 12:1
except
in this context.
If you are not familiar with what’s going on here
I’ll take just a
few minutes to get you up to speed,
but I would
also strongly encourage you
to
read the chapter entitled, “Evil Within” in The Grace Exchange.
Paul presents this concept
in Romans
7:14-25,
with the
two key verses being 7:22-23:
ROM 7:22 For I joyfully concur with the law of God in the
inner man,
ROM 7:23 but I see a different law in the members of my
body, waging war against the law of my mind, and making me a prisoner of the
law of sin which is in my members.
And the quickest way for me to do this
is to use those
funny little drawings
that show
up whenever we get near this concept.
But first let me remind us
of the foundation
upon which Paul places this truth.
In the chapters preceding these verses in Romans 7
Paul told us about
all of the things
that have
already changed in the life of the Christian.
He told us about the change that has already taken place
within the Christian at the spirit level,
how our spirits
have been recreated in righteousness.
In simple terms,
Jesus Christ
places a new heart within us,
a heart
that loves Him
and
loves righteousness.
He told us about how we now have absolute and eternal peace
with God.
He told us about how we have now died to the law,
died to a
relationship with God that rests upon our performance,
and we have
been joined to Christ Himself,
with our spirits now living in a constant love union with
the Spirit of Christ.
He told us about how we have now been freed from sin,
both from its
penalty and from its power over us.
All of these changes have been presented to us
not as things
that should take place in our lives,
but rather
as things that have already been accomplished by God in and for us.
And then,
against that
backdrop,
Paul brings
up the question,
“If all of this truly has changed in our lives,
then why do we
still battle sin in our lives?”
If we really are new creations in Christ,
with recreated
hearts
that love
God
and
long to follow Him,
then why do we still have
such tremendous
pulls toward evil
raging
within us at times.
I have a very precious Christian friend
who, about a year
ago, said to me,
“Well, Larry, if I make it through today
I will have made
it 13 years without a drink.”
He made it through that day,
and every day
since then,
and he has
every evidence of a strong,
secure
foundation in his walk with the King,
but his statement will stay with me for the rest of my life.
It is filled with so much truth.
After 13 years
the pull
toward the bottle is still there,
and
it still has the power to destroy his life.
And practical righteousness living
is always just
one day,
one step,
one
choice at a time.
But if it’s true that,
2CO 5:17 ...if any man is in Christ, he is a new
creature; the old things passed away; behold, new things have come...,
then how can
those evil impulses
continue to
exist within the child of God?
Paul says
it is because of
our physical bodies.
And
this is the way it works:
When we come into this world
we are each given
a house in which to live.
That house is our physical body.
It is a remarkable creation,
designed by God
as the perfect tool
with which
our spirits and unique personalities
can
communicate with this physical world.
Each body is equipped with the most amazing on-board
computer
in the form of
our physical brain.
It learns and records not just information,
but an endless
stream of emotional responses
and reasoning processes
at a
truly remarkable rate.
But even though it learns quickly,
it does not
unlearn well at all.
This past year I switched
from the Mac to
the PC world in my home computer.
There are some things I miss about my Mac,
but one of the
things I really like about my PC
is the “uninstall”
command.
When I put some program onto my PC
and then decide I
no longer want it,
all I have
to do is to hit the “uninstall” command
and
it goes through the dozens of files that contain bits and pieces of that
program
and
it automatically removes them all.
Our physical bodies
have no
“uninstall” command.
Once we have recorded something within our minds and
emotions,
it’s there until we die.
But a physical body is not the only thing
we bring with us
into this world.
We also bring a heart in rebellion against God,
a spirit control
center
that is
determined not to submit to God at any cost.
It is that spirit
that gives the
total leadership
for
programing the entire basic operating system that is built into our physical
bodies.
As
a result
we all have
bodies that are trained
to reason,
and
feel,
and
respond as if God cannot be trusted,
or doesn’t care,
or isn’t
there.
Then those of us who respond
to the work of
the Holy Spirit in our lives come to Christ
and in that
process
God
creates a new heart within us.
It
is a heart
that loves God,
and eagerly
responds to His leadership.
But this new heart
does not get a
brand new body to train.
Instead,
it must take up
residence in the same old body
that has already been totally
trained
to
think,
feel,
respond,
and
remember as if God was the enemy.
And this is exactly the situation
that Paul is
describing
when He
says:
ROM 7:22 For I joyfully concur with the law of God in the
inner man,
ROM 7:23 but I see a different law in the members of my
body, waging war against the law of my mind, and making me a prisoner of the
law of sin which is in my members.
And this is also why
when Paul begins
his principles for life within the family of God
the very
first thing he does
is to
remind us of the first
and
the greatest calling we face here on this earth:
ROM 12:1 I urge you therefore, brethren, by the mercies
of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God,
which is your spiritual service of worship.
Everything else he has to say to us
depends upon the
degree to which
we
co-operate with our Lord
in
bringing our physical bodies
under
the leadership of our new spirits.
This isn’t where Paul stops.
He then goes on
to talk with us
about the
way in which we go about doing that.
But we’ll have to save that for next week.
Before I quit, though,
I want to add
just one more comment
to
something I said earlier.
I talked about the well-meaning
but misguided
evangelist
who pumps
up his eager listeners
to
“lay it all on the alter for Christ”.
Some of you may have been a little offended by what I said.
But let me offer one further word of qualification to that
whole thing,
and then explain
what I see as the tragic missing ingredient
in that
type of an approach.
First the qualification...
I do know
with
absolute certainty
that
God is seeking to move every one of us
to the point
where we will make a choice
to place
our lives
and
our futures into His hands.
Real life begins
with submission
to the God who created us.
But the problem I have
with the “all on
the alter” approach
is that it can
so easily set our young (and old) converts up
for a
tremendous sense of failure
if
they do not also understand this whole thing about the body.
It is an absolute certainty
that, no matter
how fervently,
how
sincerely,
how
intensely we fling chunks of our lives onto the alter,
a short while
after we have done our flinging
we will
discover within our physical bodies
the
same bents toward evil
that
we wrestled with in the past
surging
once again into our lives.
And unless we understand why that happens,
and how God views
it,
and how He
wants us to approach it,
it
can shatter a young Christian life
in a helpless sense of failure and shame.