SERMON: GM15-054
SERIES: Renewal Through Romans: The Gospel Defined, Explained
& Applied
SETTING: North Kelso Baptist Church
SERVICE: Sunday AM (April 19, 2015)
SECTION: The
Prologue to Righteousness (Romans 1:1-17)
SUBTITLE: God’s
Perfect Plan (Part 4)
SCRIPTURE: Romans1:16b
SUBJECT: God’s saves sinners through the gospel
SUMMARY: You must believe in the Gospel’s ability to deliver you
from your sins
through the gospel
SCHEME: That each member of NKBC fully understands the ability, or the capability
of God to deliver His people from their sins through the gospel.
_____________________________________________________________
Our theme continues
to be: God
saves through the gospel
This
is still a good reminder for us all to remember that the gospel is designated
as the only means of effective salvation.
Proposition: You
must understand the ability of God to deliver His people from their sin through
the gospel.
Interrogatory Sentence: What does the text reveal to
us about the power of the gospel?
Transitional Sentence: From
our passage we learn two very important truths about the power contained in the
gospel:
·
…the gospel produces saving faith in sinners
·
…the gospel produces sanctifying faith in saints
God’s
Perfect Plan
Romans 1:16b
(Part 4)
3A God’s
Perfect Plan
Objective: That each member of NKBC fully understands
the ability, or the capability of God to deliver His people from their sins
through the gospel.
Translation:
“…for it is the power of God unto salvation for all
who are believing….” (Romans 1:16b, GDM)
INTRODUCTION
The gospel is for "everyone" (v. 16) including Jew and
Gentile. God sent His Son into the world to make it possible for all men,
everywhere, to be saved. There is no racial barrier to hinder anyone from
accepting the gospel (Romans 10:12-13); there is no social barrier to hinder anyone from
accepting the gospel (Matthew 11:28); there is no age barrier-for the young may come and
the old may come; there is no moral barrier or the "good;"
there is no national barrier because all may come
(Revelation 22:17). The gospel invitation is to all people everywhere. God
loves everybody and the Lord Jesus can save anybody! (Isaiah 55:1). This
glorious gospel, which is "the power of God unto salvation" is good
news for you.
The only qualification is the fact
that you are a sinner.
Our theme
is: God
saves through the gospel
This
is a good reminder for us all to remember that the gospel is designated as the only
means of effective salvation.
Proposition: You
must understand the ability of God to deliver His people from their sin through
the gospel.
Interrogatory Sentence: What does the text reveal to
us about the power of the gospel?
Transitional Sentence: From
our passage we learn two very important truths about the power contained in the
gospel:
·
…the gospel produces saving faith in sinners
·
…the gospel produces sanctifying faith in saints
We have
been looking at God’s Perfect Plan.
[Before we continue to dig
in to this perfect plan of God, let’s take a minute and…]
REVIEW
[We began examining the first disclosure of Paul’s
declaration and that was…]
1F THE
RESOURCE OF SAVING FAITH
“…for
it is the power of God unto salvation…”
We began looking at the first
element of the resource of saving faith: The Gospel Rescues Us
1G The Gospel Rescues Us
We said
that there were five aspects of the fact that the gospel rescues us they
were:
The gospel’s substance,
the gospel’s strategy, the gospel’s source, the gospel’s sufficiency, and the gospel’s scope.
[Last
week we looked at the fourth aspect which was…]
The Gospel’s Sufficiency
The gospel is a powerful gospel!
As a matter of fact Paul says, “…for it is the
power of God unto salvation.”
Paul is stating emphatically
that the gospel is God’s power unto salvation. We must understand that
salvation is a powerful action on God’s part and not on the action of mankind
in any fashion.
[In order to understand what
Paul meant by calling the gospel a “power,” we began by…]
DESCRIBING THE POWER OF GOD
[To describe the power of God
we first looked at it…]
Negatively
– we started by determining what Paul was not saying or what he did not
mean.
·
The gospel is not
about
God’s power; it is God’s power.
·
This is not a
simple description about God’s power. The gospel is the power of God.
·
Paul is not
telling his readers, nor us, that we have to do anything for salvation.
·
Paul is not
saying that God has done something about salvation, or has told us something
about salvation.
·
Most important,
Paul is not saying, “Well, God has done all He can do, it is now up to you. If
you do your part, then you will have salvation. Paul, and for that matter,
neither is God saying anything like that at all.
Now, on the other hand we
looked at what Paul did say from a positive standpoint.
Positive
Paul told his first century
readers how God prepared, made, produced, and is working out the salvation that
Paul has spoken of. The gospel is God’s way of saving sinners. It is God’s
power producing salvation in sinners.
This is way Matthew 1:21
says, “…for He shall save His people from their sins.”
We gave you a number of
passages to defend this position:
(Eph 1:19-20, NKJV)
(Phil 1:6, NKJV)
(Phil 2:13, (NKJV)
(1 Ptr 1:5, NKJV)
So, when Paul tells the
Romans that he is not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God
unto salvation he is saying that salvation is God’s mighty working in us
through and by the means of the gospel.
We spent some time looking at four major thoughts:
·
Paul is referring
to all God determined before He
created the earth in regards to salvation
·
Paul is referring
to all that God planned to accomplish
in regards to salvation
·
Paul is referring
to all that God has done to accomplish
his plans in regards to salvation
·
Paul is referring
to all that God will do in Christ
through the HS to ensure the salvation of His people
[After
describing the power of God from both a negative and positive standpoint, we…]
DEFINIED THE POWER OF GOD
The
Greek Word is dunamis. It is used 120 times in the bible. It carries the meaning or gives the
idea of: 1)
Strength, or ability
It refers to that inherent
power, or that power that resides in a thing by virtue of its nature, or which
a person or thing exerts and puts forth
It
is the capability or ability to actually perform what one wants to perform
because all that is needed is already within the one who has determined to do
something that is fully or totally capable.
In
God resides all the capability to save His people because everything needed to
accomplish this determination is sufficiently residing in God already.
So,
the gospel doesn’t just make salvation possible, the gospel produces salvation
in those whom God calls through the HS. God is shown to have the capability in
the effective transformation of the sinner.
Our theme continues
to be: God
saves through the gospel
This
is a good reminder for us all to remember that the gospel is designated as the
only means of effective salvation.
Proposition: You
must understand the ability of God to deliver His people from their sin through
the gospel.
[So, having had our memory
refreshed, let’s move to our…]
TRUTH FOR TODAY
Since the substance of the
gospel is good news or glad tidings, and the Strategy of the Gospel is a means
of salvation, and the Source of the Gospel is God, and the Sufficiency of the
Gospel is God’s ability or capability to save His people, we have to ask
ourselves the next logical question.
What is the extent or the
range or maybe even the effectiveness of the gospel?
Today I hope to finish the
fifth and final aspect of the fact that the Gospel Rescues Us. So, today we
will examine the…
The Scope of the Gospel
“…for everyone who believes, for the Jew
first, and also for the Greek.”
Here is the fifth reason that
Paul is not ashamed of the gospel. It is a gospel for all kinds or types of
peoples. Because the gospel is God’s power, or ability or capability it is a
gospel for all types of peoples.
Think about – the Gentiles
did not have the law of God given by Moses and were absolute sinners. As
sinners, Gentiles were in need of salvation.
The Jews who had the Law of
God were absolute sinners. They were in need of salvation.
The Scripture is clear that
no man can save himself with the law or apart from the law. But Paul says, “The
gospel is God’s power unto salvation.”
There is something new here
isn’t there? “To the Jew first and also to the Greek, or Gentiles.”
To the Jew first – this is
the divinely planned historical order.
For the record, Paul didn’t list
the Jews first because they were of greater importance than anybody else. He is
simply referring to God’s plan chronologically – it is simply a time
relationship.
Remember the Samaritan woman
when she said, “Salvation is of the Jews.” It was. God started with the Jews.
When the gospel was preached it began in Jerusalem, then it went into Samaria
and then to the rest of the known world.
Even Jesus started with the
lost sheep of the house of Israel. The Jews were God’s chosen people. So the
gospel was to be preached to them first. Paul, when he could, started preaching
to the Jews in the Synagogue and then went to the Gentiles.
There is another reason, I
think why Paul said to the Jew first and also to the Greeks.
He wanted to make sure no one
would think that the gospel was just for the Gentiles. He didn’t want anyone to
think that the Jews did not need the gospel. Of course many Jews, particularly
the Pharisees thought they did not need this gospel of God from Paul.
But Paul will make it amply
clear in chapters 2 and 3 that the Jews are as hopelessly in need of salvation
as much as any Gentile sinner.
So, to the Jew first, and
also to the Greek!
It is no different today.
Many people deny that they need salvation or the gospel. They even become angry
at the thought that they need to be converted.
Many will say:
·
I was brought in
chapel or SS
·
I was
indoctrinated from a little child
·
I have been
baptized or christened
·
I have been good
and have tried to live by the golden rule
·
I am not that bad
·
God will never
reject me
·
I am very moral
and live a very moral life
·
I belong to a
church body
We know that apart from
Christ the need the gospel. To the Jew first, and then to everybody else. Why? Because
no man can save himself!
“Therefore, by the deeds of the law no
flesh will be justified in His sight, for by the law is the knowledge of sin.” (Romans 3:20, NKJV)
Regardless of the sin, and
regardless of the type or kind of sinner, the gospel is for all types or kinds
of men.
Take note however, the one
thing that Paul does not mean when he gives us the scope of the gospel. Paul is
not saving salvation is for every man who has ever lived, or who is living now,
or who will live one day. He is not implying that the gospel will rescue every
Jew or Gentile.
God, through Christ, will save
His people, both who are Jews and Gentiles, from their sin. The scope is all
types and kinds, both Jews and Gentiles.
So Paul states emphatically, “For
I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God to
salvation for everyone who believes, for the Jew first, and also for the Greek.”
The let’s take a minute and
look at a phrase in the middle of the clause:
“…to everyone who believes…”
There are at least three (3)
things to keep in mind at this point:
The first thing to keep in mind is that Believe and faith are key words in Paul’s
letter to the Romans. These words are especially important in 3:21 through
4:25.
To believe is to put one’s
full trust in the God who “justifies the ungodly by the means of Christ’s
sacrifice and death on the cross.”
It is not merely assenting
to, agreeing to, or accepting certain intellectual facts. Thursday, because my
friend Mike brought it up, I tried to share with him that merely believing God
exists and accepting that intellectual truth is not enough for salvation.
Believing and faith include
the necessary surrender of one’s will to God. It is a commitment and reliance
upon God.
Faith is not simply agreeing
with a set of doctrines but absolute surrender and trust to and in the person
of Jesus Christ.
·
When you turn a
water faucet on – you trust or rely or belief that good, safe water will come
out of the faucet
·
When you drive
over a bridge – you trust or rely or belief that it will not collapse
underneath of you
Faith is going beyond truth
or fact and placing your soul in the care of Christ by relying, trusting and
believing that He will keep or save your soul.
The second thing that we have to keep in mind is that although, it is God who has:
·
Elected or
predestined a certain number to be saved
·
Has provided an
acceptable sacrifice that has appeased His wrath
·
Has provided the
HS who regenerates us or gives us life
·
Has given through
the HS both the gift of faith and repentance
·
Has through the
HS made us to be Christians
We are still required and are
responsible to actively believe in the Lord Jesus Christ.
Paul faulted the Jews for
failing to believe in chapter 9:32-33 and in chapter 10:3-8. Paul called all
types of people to believe in Jesus as the Messiah, both Jews and Gentiles.
Paul held them responsible for their unbelief.
Don’t forget however, that
the gospel is a power that effects salvation and effectively calls people to
salvation.
There is a sort of tension
between the sovereign work of God and the responsibility of the sinner. Paul
will try to explain this tension especially in Chapters 9-11.
The third thing to keep in mind is that faith or believe is not a “work.” Exercising faith and or believing is not
something we do, it is a response to what God Has already done.
Some want to say that we don’t
even have to believe or exercise faith otherwise that is a work on our part,
and of course we don’t work for our salvation.
John Calvin wrote: “Faith is a kind of vessel with which we
come empty and with the mouth of our soul open to seek God’s grace.” (Institutes
3:11.7)
Believing even though it is a
human activity, contains no “merit” or worth for which God is somehow bound to
reward us for – salvation from the
first to the last act is God’s work!
Why is this so important to
Paul? Why should we concern ourselves with the scope of the gospel?
The answer is actual very
simple. Paul wants to emphasize the universal scope of the gospel, showing that
the gospel reaches both Jews and Gentiles, not just the Jews.
Once the Roman believers
understand this, both Jews and Gentiles are included in God’s plan of
salvation, Paul hopes that they will support and help him in his quest to
preach the gospel to the gentiles in Spain and in the west.
So, as Paul brings the scope
of the gospel to the forefront it gives hint to what he will expound about God’s
Perfect Plan in the rest of his letter.
Thomas Schreiner made this
observation:
“When Paul says that the gospel is to the Jew, he may
be reflecting on his missionary practice of using the synagogue as a starting
point for the preaching of the gospel since his missionary practice was rooted
in his theological conviction that the Jews were specially elected to be God’s
people. The priority of the Jews was not merely a historical reality that had
now lapsed for Paul. The place of the Jews in the outworking of salvation history
was still crucial, and Paul attempts to work out this issue in chapters 9-11.”
[There
is a second thing that salvation does, salvation completely…]
2G Reconciles Us to God
When
God saves us through Christ Jesus, He reconciles us to Himself. God restores
the communion and fellowship with Him that was lost in the fall of Adam.
Salvation is not merely forgiveness. I think some Christians think this. They
think, great I am forgiven and will go to heaven when I die and they think that
is it. Now they can live their live how they want. No, God restores a
relationship with us. Mankind had fellowship with God, he had communion, but
that was lost by Adam.
The Definition
The
propitiation or sacrifice of Christ on the cross placed sinners in a changed
relationship to God and towards his judgments against us. And so reconciliation
shows us the both the price and the value of the cross. The sacrifice of Christ
was intended to satisfy God and reconcile God to the sinner.
Christ’s
death brings an end to the enmity, the anger, the hostility, the estrangement
that God existed between God and sinners. God’s hostility is removed by the
death of Christ. By the way, God plays the active role in reconciliation. God
reconciles us to Him.
“But God demonstrates His
own love toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.
Much more then, having now been justified by his blood, we shall be saved from
wrath through him. For if when we were reconciled to God through the death of
His Son, much more, having been reconciled, we shall be saved. And not only
that, but we rejoice in God through whom we have now received the
reconciliation.” (Romans 5:8-11, NKJV)
“Now all things are of God,
who has reconciled us to Himself through Jesus Christ, and has given us the
ministry of reconciliation, that is that God was in Christ reconciling the
world to himself, not imputing their trespasses to them, and has committed to
us the word of reconciliation. (II Corinthians 5:18-19, NKJV)
Reconciliation
is the change of God’s attitude toward us who are sinners.
The Illustration
Paul
in his writings illustrates this idea of reconciliation with at least four (4)
illustrations:
·
Those who were far off are brought near – b4 X, we were far away from God
·
Strangers are made fellow citizens – b4 X we were strangers to God, citizens of heaven
·
The dividing wall is removed – the
wall of enmity, hostility, anger, judgment gone
·
Peace with God – God is no longer
at “war” with us, peace was declared
So,
the result of reconciliation is a right relationship with God that makes both
access to God and fellowship with God possible.
“For He himself is our
peace, who has made both one, and has broken down the middle wall of
separation, having abolished the enmity, that is, the law of commandments
contained in ordinances, so as to create in himself one new man from the two,
thus making peace and that He might reconcile them both to God in one body
through the cross, thereby putting to death the enmity. And he came and
preached peace to you who were afar off and to those who were near. For through
Him we both have access by one Spirit to the Father.” (Ephesians 2:14-18, NKJV)
Quite
frankly we are not saved until the communion or relationship with God is
restored. This is an essential part of our salvation. Reconciliation is
essential and cannot be minimized.
[Thirdly,
salvation…]
3B RESTORES TO US THE HOPE
OF GLORY
When
Adam fell into sin, he and the entire human race came under the wrath of God.
The wrath of God in turn sends the guilty to eternal destruction. Men need to
be delivered from that eternal destruction that is to come.
Do
you remember what John the Baptist preached? “Repent! Save yourselves from this
wicked or sinful generation. Flee from the wrath which is to come.”
Man
is under the wrath of God. God sends men to hell and men need to be saved or
delivered from God’s wrath that condemns men to hell.
In
chapter 8 Paul writes, “For we are saved
by hope, but hope that is seen is not hope, for what a man seeth, why doth he
yet hope for? But if we hope for that we see not, then do we with patience wait
for it.” (Romans 8:4)
Paul
also teaches in Romans that we are waiting for, and actually groaning in
anticipation for the redemption of our body. Of course this is all in the
future, and that is why we hope
We
have a hope. WE have a future. We will one day be saved or delivered from all
of this sin and pollution through the salvation of God through Jesus Christ.
So,
the first element of the resource of saving faith is its’ substance – the
gospel of Jesus Christ. The second element of the resource of saving faith is
its’ strategy – it delivers or saves us from sin, it reconciles us to God, and
it gives us a hope of glory in the future.
Our theme has
been: God
saves through the gospel
This
is still a good reminder for us all to remember that the gospel is designated
as the only means of effective salvation.
Proposition: You
must understand the ability of God to deliver His people from their sin through
the gospel.
Interrogatory Sentence: We have tried to answer the
question, “What does the text reveal to us about the power of the gospel?”
Transitional Sentence: From
our passage we learned the first of two very important truths about the power
contained in the gospel:
…the gospel produces saving
faith in sinners!
How
does the gospel produce saving faith in sinners? By understanding that…
The Gospel Rescues us
The Gospel Reconciles Us
The Gospel Restores Us
[What do you say we wrap
this up, shall we?]
CONCLUSION
Let me conclude with this statement - The gospel is good news from
God to man!
So, I exhort
you as genuine
believers to: live in the light of the fact that you have
been rescued, reconciled, and restored by God through his means of salvation,
which is the gospel.
Remember,
the writer of Hebrews wrote in Hebrews 3:14…
“For we have become
partakers of Christ if we hold the beginning of our confidence steadfast to the
end.” (Hebrews 3:14, NKJV)
Let’s
pray! J
Benediction Blessing:
“The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be
with you all. Amen. (Philippians 4:23, NKJV)
1 comment:
Thanks Gregg for a wonderful post, After the day I have had it was good to read your post.
Yvonne.
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