2001
Larry Huntsperger Peninsula Bible Fellowship
|
4/1/01 |
Where’s My Payment Book? |
Romans 8:3-4 |
4/1/01
Where’s My Payment Book?
ROM 7:25 Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!
So then, on the one hand I myself with my mind am serving the law of God, but
on the other, with my flesh the law of sin.
ROM 8:1 There is therefore now no condemnation for those
who are in Christ Jesus.
ROM 8:2 For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus
has set you free from the law of sin and of death.
ROM 8:3 For what the Law could not do, weak as it was
through the flesh, God did: sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh
and as an offering for sin, He condemned sin in the flesh,
ROM 8:4 in order that the requirement of the Law might be
fulfilled in us, who do not walk according to the flesh, but according to the
Spirit.
We are involved in an adventure together,
an adventure of
discovering who we really are,
and what
that discovery means for us in real life.
In a group this size
it is safe to
assume
that some
of you came in here this morning
feeling discouraged,
defeated,
and
completely overwhelmed by life.
You are a child of God,
there was a time
when you placed your life,
your sins,
your past,
and your future
into the hands of your God.
And he accepted you.
You know that He
did.
But now things have changed.
Now you find yourself feeling like a spiritual beggar
sitting along
side the parade route of the Saints of God.
You have your little cup in your hand,
held out to those
you see passing by,
hoping
someone will notice you
and toss in just a tiny bit of
something
to help you make
it through the next week.
You don’t think in terms of victory.
You think only of
survival.
It wasn’t always this way.
There was a time
in the distant past
when you
were not sitting on the curb,
dressed in rags,
eyes fixed on the pavement at your feet.
There was a time when you were marching in the parade
yourself.
It was all new to you then-
a new life,
filled with
hope,
filled with optimism,
filled with the exhilarating thought
that maybe, just maybe this God you’d turned to for help,
for redemption,
could
actually bring about some changes in your life.
But then, somewhere along the way,
something
happened.
Those other travelers who came along side
and struck up a
conversation with you,
they may
have had something to do with it.
That one fellow got you looking
at all the other
marchers around you,
pointing out their costumes,
and
their decorations,
asking you why you didn’t have what they had.
You began to feel rather out of place,
even a little
embarrassed about the clothing that had been selected for you.
What you’d been given
certainly fit you
well,
but...well, it didn’t look like anyone
else’s,
and it troubled
you.
But that other fellow was the one
who really caused
the problems.
He seemed so nice,
so concerned,
even
compassionate at the time.
But somehow he got you talking
about some of
those awful problems
that
plagued your life before you met the King,
and the more he
talked,
the more he
helped you to see
that
nothing really did change
when you turned to the Lord.
The more he talked,
the slower you
walked,
and the
more discouraged you became.
And then there came that day,
a very long time
ago,
when it
just seemed more reasonable,
more sensible,
more honest to step out of the parade,
and sit down on the curb,
and watch as all
the others passed you by.
And that’s where you’ve been ever since,
just a beggar
sitting along the parade route of the King,
watching His people marching by,
hoping someone will notice you
and toss you some little tidbit
to get you through the day.
And if any of that seems familiar,
I want you to
know
that you
have not been defeated by the truth,
you have been
defeated by a lie,
and by the
father of all lies, Satan.
There is a phrase used by Paul
in Colossians
3:18
that
describes so well what happens
when the truth is replaced by a lie within
us.
He says,
“Let no one keep defrauding you of your prize...”
The passage we will move into today
as we continue
our study of Romans chapter 8
may help
you to reclaim your rightful place in the great parade of the King.
It is true that you were once a spiritual beggar,
with neither the
right,
nor the
ability to walk with the King.
But that day when He stopped in front of you,
knelt down into
the filth surrounding you,
took your
hands in His,
and
looked into your eyes
as He asked you if you wanted to be made
whole,
when you griped
His hands,
and told
Him, “Yes!”,
he
did far more than you have allowed yourself to believe.
Paul puts it this way in the first chapter of Colossians.
He says that your God, “... qualified you to share in the
inheritance of the saints in light. ... He delivered you from the domain of
darkness, and transferred you to the kingdom of His beloved Son, in whom you
have redemption, the forgiveness of sins.”
It was no mistake that you once walked in step with the holy
ones of God,
because even
though the lies
may now
have blinded you to the truth,
you, too, have been
transformed by God Himself.
You have been qualified
to share in the
inheritance of the saints in light.
We left our study at the 2nd verse of Romans
chapter 8.
But we cannot reenter this passage
without getting a
running start at it.
Paul ends the 7th chapter by saying,
ROM 7:25 Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!
So then, on the one hand I myself with my mind am serving the law of God, but
on the other, with my flesh the law of sin.
During the past two weeks
we have come to
understand
that Paul
is describing
this
remarkable situation we are called to relate to
once we come to Christ.
Do you know what it is?
It is the exact opposite
of that situation
that forms
the basis for so many of those really stupid scary movies
where some normally nice, good person
is possessed by
an evil spirit.
When we understand what Paul is saying
in the last half
of Romans 7,
we realize
that the Christian
has
an absolutely holy,
pure, glorious spirit
taking up residence in a really raunchy body,
a body that has
been trained and conditioned
to function
in absolute rebellion to the truth.
We don’t have a bad spirit
possessing a good
body,
we have a good spirit,
a perfect spirit
taking
possession of a bad body.
Paul says, “For I joyfully concur with the law of God in
the inner man, but I see a different law in the members of my body, waging
war...”
Then, from there Paul presented God’s perspective
on this
good-spirit/bad-body situation in which we find ourselves:
ROM 8:1 There is therefore now no condemnation for those
who are in Christ Jesus.
That voice that once walked beside you
as you marched in
the parade,
pointing out to you all of the reasons
why you had no right to walk with the King
was the voice of
Satan,
shooting you with blanks,
but
the noise of his attack frightened you.
None of us have earned the right to walk with the King.
None of us ever
could.
I love the way Paul said it
in his letter to
his friend, Titus.
TIT 3:5 He saved us, not on the basis of deeds which we
have done in righteousness, but according to His mercy, by the washing of
regeneration and renewing by the Holy Spirit,
TIT 3:6 whom He poured out upon us richly through Jesus
Christ our Savior,
TIT 3:7 that being justified by His grace we might be
made heirs according to the hope of eternal life.
But that isn’t where Paul stops.
He then goes on in Romans 8
to complete the
picture
of this
remarkable transformation
that
God has accomplished in the life of the Christian.
He says,
ROM 8:2 For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus
has set you free from the law of sin and of death.
He wants to be sure we clearly understand
that our faith in
Christ
has
provided us with our entrance into
a
relationship with our God
unlike anything we had ever experienced
before.
The Christian has been freed
from what Paul
calls “the law of sin and of death”
and now lives under
what Paul calls “the law of the Spirit of
life in Christ Jesus”.
I really do not want to make this
more complicated
than it is.
Those two phrases
simply describe
the two
systems under which we relate to God,
one of them
before we come to Christ,
and
the other one after we come to Christ.
The Law of Sin and of Death
we have examined
in some detail
during the
past few weeks.
God reveals His moral law to us,
our self-centered
spirit rebels against it,
and we then
live out our lives
hiding or running from the real and
justified fear of the condemnation of our Creator.
But what changes when we turn to our Lord,
accepting His
offer of forgiveness through Christ?
What happens when we exchange the Law of Sin and Of Death
for the Law
of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus?
Well, the truth is that the entire framework
of our
relationship with God
is changed
forever.
Rather than having to continue
living out a
futile attempt to earn God’s acceptance through our performance,
never
knowing for sure
where we stand with Him,
He picks us up in His eternal love,
removes our sin debt from us forever,
places His Spirit within us,
and
then begins performing in us
and through us
those things we could never have
accomplished for Him through our flesh-based efforts.
The problem is
that most of us
simply do not believe it.
Do you have mortgage on your home?
Those of you who
do
know what a
constant, major financial obligation it is.
Shortly after we started our mortgage payments
the bank sent us
a packet.
It contained payment coupon books
containing
coupons to accompany
every
payment for the entire life of the loan.
I opened one of the books
and saw a coupon
with the date
for a
payment I would be making
fifteen years in the future.
Now, imagine what it would be like
if, shortly after
receiving those coupon booklets,
I were to
receive a letter from a wealthy uncle
informing me that he had just sent a check
to the bank
paying off my loan in full.
OK, the first of the next month comes around
and there I am at
my desk.
On one side of me is this stack of payment vouchers,
and right on top
is one dated for that month,
with the
exact amount I owe,
and a
second line telling me how much additional I will owe
if
the payment is not in their office by the 10th of the month.
On the other side of me
is the letter
from my uncle
telling me
the loan is paid in full.
And the question is,
which do I
believe.
Every day we live our lives as Christians
we face a similar
choice.
On one side we have our stack of sin vouchers -
all those things
for which we know,
rightfully we owe the Lord.
There was that stupid thing we said to our marriage partner,
or our child,
or our
brother or sister or parent.
There was that lust we succumbed to,
that lie we told,
that anger
we gave reign to.
And we know it matters,
and we feel the weight
of moral debt before our Creator.
And then, on the other side of us
is a letter from
our God,
a letter
saying,
PSA 103:10 He has not dealt with us according to our
sins, Nor rewarded us according to our iniquities.
PSA 103:11 For as high as the heavens are above the
earth, So great is His lovingkindness toward those who fear Him.
PSA 103:12 As far as the east is from the west, So far
has He removed our transgressions from us.
PSA 103:13 Just as a father has compassion on his
children, So the Lord has compassion on those who fear Him.
And the question is
who will we
believe?
And the answer to that question
will determine
how we live out our relationship with our God that day.
The answer will determine
whether we continue
to sit on the curb,
eyes cast
down,
our
little cup held out to those who pass by,
or whether we
step in stride next to our King, ...giving thanks to the Father, who has
qualified us to share in the inheritance of the saints in light.
Paul knew how difficult it would be
for us to take
those coupon books,
all of
those coupon books,
and
toss them into the trash.
And this is why he says what he says
in the next two
verses of Romans 8.
He says,
ROM 8:3-4 For what the Law could not do, weak as it was
through the flesh, God did sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh
and as an offering for sin, He condemned sin in the flesh...
And when Paul says that God “condemned sin in the flesh”
he is not saying
that He condemned us for our sin,
he is
saying that He condemned,
ended,
destroyed forever
the power of our
sin to ever again separate us from our God.
He condemned sin in the flesh...
in order that the
requirement of the Law...
And the requirement of the Law
is absolute and
total moral perfection.
That is what was required from anyone
who ever hoped to
stand before God without fear.
And Paul tells us that through Christ
the total
requirement of the moral law of God,
absolute and
eternal righteousness, has now been...
fulfilled in us, who do not walk according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit.