Sunday, June 01, 2008

A sermon based on Romans 3:1-21/28, delivered to All Saints Anglican Church on 6/1/2008 at the Convent Chapel of St. Mary's Medical Center, Huntington, WV.

Today we begin a long focused time in the book of Romans. The Lectionary has us camping out in this book until the middle of September, so we will get a nice big chunk and basically be able to give you a broad overview.

Paul appears to have written this letter to the Romans from Corinth, where he was in the midst of collecting money for the poor of Jerusalem. After delivering the money to Jerusalem, he intended to visit Rome, then go on to Spain. However, he was arrested in Jerusalem and his plans changed rather drastically. He did make it to Rome, but this time as a prisoner waiting to appear before Caesar. A woman named “Phoebe, who belonged to the church at Cenchrea near Corinth (16:1) probably carried the letter to Rome.” (Ryrie Study Bible intro to the book of Romans).

Romans has been said to be the clearest, most systematic statement of the Gospel in the whole of the New Testament. It is certainly the most concentrated in terms of doctrine. It’s overall theme is “The Righteousness of God”, the theme verses being found in Chapter 1: 16, 17: 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. For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith for faith, as it is written, “The righteous shall live by faith.”

What Manner of God Do We Worship?
In this very first mention of the theme, we see Paul describing God as righteous. What does that mean?

It means that God is Pure - as light is pure, Simple – as Truth is simple, Straight – as a ruler is straight, Just – as a wise and fair judge is just; and Sincere, having no mixture of chaff and grain. God’s righteousness will not allow anything impure to come near it and live.

Only that which is pure in itself can stand before the presence of a Righteous God. And this is what causes us problems as human beings.
Ever since the fall of Adam and Eve, human beings have been tainted with the guilt and stain of Sin. This guilt comes to us by way of heredity; we are born into it before we have even done anything, good or bad. All human beings have a ‘Sin-Nature’ – the default setting if you will, that causes every area of our lives to be flawed and inherently imperfect. Even our attempts to be good are flawed by our imperfect motivations: the desire to look good before others, to feel good about ourselves, or to be prideful in some way, etc.

As a result we sin – ‘we miss the mark’. We sin because we are infected with an imperfect nature. Acts of sinfulness are a result of our Sin Nature doing its natural thing. And our reading is very clear about the extent of Sin: ‘All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God (Rom. 3:23).
Some people try to be good and fail because the effort itself is doomed by inherent imperfection. Others know enough about the truth to know what God requires; yet choose to do the wrong thing anyway. This willful rebellion against the Truth elicits God’s wrath. (Romans 1: 18: The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousenss of men, who suppress the truth in unrighteousness…)

God’s wrath is the antipathy that light has for darkness, truth has for falseness and purity has for impurity. But God’s wrath is not simply an impersonal force – it’s personal. He is personally offended by our sin. After all, He set up human beings in a perfect environment, needing nothing to make our lives more complete – and we went and messed it up – just because we could. I say ‘we’ because we are all present in Adam’s loins as it were. Adam’s sin is every man’s sin. Thus, every human who has ever been born carries with him or her the guilt and stain of sin that inherently alienates us from a just and holy God.

And we know this. We know that God’s wrath needs to be propitiated – or turned away. We know we need to offer Him something to take away His terrible – and justified wrath. Our problem is that we have don’t have anything pure enough or holy enough to offer him. Even if we were to live the life of St. Francis or Clare, St. Benedict or Scholastica, even then our meager acts of goodness would not be enough to appease God.
Indeed the Law of Moses was given precisely so we could see just how impossible it is to please God through trying to observe the law. Verse 20 of Chapter 3 spells it out very starkly: …”For by works of the law no human being will be justified in his sight, since through the law comes knowledge of sin.” Bad, Bad news!

Good News
But the Good news is this:
21 … the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law, although the Law and the Prophets bear witness to it— 22 the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe.
We can become righteous through faith in Christ! Even though all have sinned and fallen short of God’s glory, yet we are justified ( made righteous) by his grace, as a gift through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, (v24) 25 whom God put forward as a propitiation by his blood, to be received by faith.

There is that word again, ‘Propitiation’. According to Howard Marshall, in his book The Work of Christ ( pg 77) it means ‘to appease an offended person so that he is willing to forgive.’ Marshall goes on to explain that in pagan religious language, the word described attempts to placate angry gods who broke out in judgment against men. To speak in such terms of the sacrifice of Christ might suggest (to some) that God is as capricious as a pagan deity.”

Therefore some Bible translators have said, “Propitiation makes God to seem too much like us, too petty!. Let’s not use that word. Instead let’s use the word ‘expiate’. That word means that sin will be wiped out or canceled so that it no longer stands between the sinner and God. The only problem is that ‘sin’ is not a simple ‘thing’ to be dealt with in a clinical fashion. Sin is a personal affront to God, and it arouses his wrath.

And religion, says Marshall, ‘is not concerned with ‘things’ but with personal relationships between men and their Creator. Only the word ‘propitiation’ will communicate the reality of God’s wrath as a personal reaction to Sin.

But again, the Good News is that God himself has offered Jesus as the Propitiation for sin, taking away the offense. The very same holy and righteous judge who reacts against sin shows us His mercy by giving His own Son as a sacrifice for sin. As a result God is ‘just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus.’ (v. 27).

When you place your faith in Christ, you are accepting a gift – a perfect gift that cannot be replicated through attempts to live according to the works of the law. Just as Paul concludes in v. 28: “For we hold that one is justified by faith apart from works of the law.”

Friends, when you die and go to stand before God, there won’t be any of this happy nonsense that people spout about getting into heaven, “I’m a good person – I haven’t killed anyone – I don’t eat meat – and I use florescent light bulbs”

No! You will stand before an inflexibly pure God whom you have personally offended by your own willfulness and rebellion. Unless you carry with you something more substantial than a green consciousness and good intentions, you will quickly find yourself on the receiving end of God’s wrath.

When you stand before God, you better be wearing the white robe of righteousness that you get from believing in Jesus as the Propitiation of your sin against God the Father. If you don’t’ have it – you better get it – today, before you leave this place. It’s free for the asking; all you have to do is accept it.

For those of us who have received this gift, we better appreciate it! There is nothing more valuable on earth than having had the guilt and stain of our sin removed through believing in Jesus. So, when you come to receive communion, give thanks! Make Eucharist, taking the elements… in remembrance that Christ died for you…. and feed on him in your hearts by faith, with thanksgiving!. Amen.

No comments: