SERMON GMT14-014
SETTING: North Kelso Baptist Church
SERVICE: Sunday AM
SUBTITLE: The
Principles of Justifying Faith
SCRIPTURE: Romans
4:23-25
SUBJ: Christians believe in God
SUMMARY: Faith is the critical element of
Christianity
SCHEME: That the members of NKBC rest in the evidence of God’s satisfaction by
the exercise of faith
1A Justifying Faith believes in God’s Promise (Vs. 23)
1B The Origination
of God’s Promise
2B The Clarification
of God’s Promise
3B The Definition
of God’s Promise
2A Justifying Faith believes in God’s Person (Vs. 24a)
3A Justifying Faith believes in God’s Plan (Vs. 24b)
4A Justifying Faith believes in God’s Purpose (Vs. 25)
1B God’s Purpose Included a Revelation
2B God’s Purpose
Included a Rejection
3B God’s Purpose
Included a Resurrection
The Principles
of Justifying Faith
Romans 4:23-25
INTRODUCTION
A. What is
Justification? (Albert Barnes)
What is justification? It is the declared purpose of God to
regard and treat those sinners who believe in Jesus Christ as if they had not
sinned, on the ground of the merits of the Savior. It is not mere pardon.
Pardon is a free forgiveness of past offenses. It has reference to those sins
as forgiven and blotted out. Justification has respect to the law, and to God's
future dealings with the sinner. It is an act by which God determines to treat
him hereafter as righteous--as if he had not sinned. The basis for this is the
merit of the Lord Jesus Christ, merit that we can plead as if it were our own.
He has taken our place and died in our stead; He has met the descending stroke
of justice, which would have fallen on our own heads if He had not interposed.
B.
Martin Luther wrote, “In these verses the whole of Christianity is
comprehended.”
Paul is winding up his discussion on justification
by faith. He writes, “It was not written for his sake alone that it was imputed
to him; but also for us…”
C.
The knowledge that justification is by or through faith is of absolute
importance to the believer.
THEME: Christians believe in God
This
is a good reminder for us all that faith
in God is the critical element of Christianity.
PROPOSTION: This morning I propose to you that if you
believe in God as Abraham believed in God you are justified before God.
Interrogative Sentence: What principles or truths does
a person need to believe in order to be justified before God?
Transitional Sentence: This passage suggests four (4)
principles that must be believed by faith in order to be justified before God.
- · Justifying Faith believes in God’s Promise
- · Justifying Faith believes in God’s Person
- · Justifying Faith believes in God’s Plan
- · Justifying Faith believes in God’s Purpose
[Let’s
begin our study today of the principles of justifying faith by examining the first
principle that needs to be believed. Justifying
faith…
1A JUSTIFYING FATIH ELIEVES IN GOD’S PROMISE (VS. 23-24a)
I want you notice first of all…
1B The Origination of God’s Promise
Paul spent a great deal of time in chapters three
and four analyzing faith. Paul went into great detail describing and defining
faith.
When you look close you will see that Paul wasn’t
interested in faith in the abstract or in generalities. Paul was specifically
interested in making his case for “justification by faith.”
In doing so, he used Abraham as an illustration to
demonstrate what faith was, and to show us that Abraham was justified by faith.
Paul also used Abraham to show us that Abraham’s faith was counted or actually
reckoned to him for righteousness.
You remember Christ told the disciples, “…unless your
righteousness exceeds the righteousness of the scribes and the Pharisees, you
will by no means enter the kingdom of heaven.” (Matt 5:20, NKJV)
In other words, the Scribes and the Pharisees
thought that by their attitude and actions they earned or secured a
righteousness that would be acceptable to God for justification and to go to
heaven.
Jesus says that is enough. It is not the right type.
You need a greater or really, a different righteousness than what the Scribes
and Pharisees believed they had earned.
Paul bears his heart in Romans 10:1-3. He writes, “Brethren, my
heart’s desire and prayer to God for Israel is that they may be saved, for I
bear them witness that they have a zeal for God, but not according to
knowledge. For they being ignorant of God’s righteousness and seeking to
establish their own righteousness, have not submitted to the righteousness of
God.” (Romans 10:1-3, NKJV)
This is very serious – this is exactly what all
religions other than biblical Christianity also do. Man wants to earn
forgiveness and his place in heaven by obtaining “a righteousness” through his
own work or efforts rather than to submit by faith to the righteousness of
Jesus Christ.
So, Paul explains what saving faith is and builds a
case for justification by faith and faith alone. This is what sola fide means,
faith only. No works, no efforts, no sacraments, no human contribution.
So Paul winds up his argument. But before he does he
takes a minute in order to give us…
2B The Clarification of God’s Promise (VSS.
23-24a)
“Now, it was not written for his sake alone that it
was imputed to him, but also for us.”
Basically Paul is saying I am quoting this faith of
Abraham for a couple of reasons.
First – to really give you an
accurate picture of Abraham’s faith. Paul is telling his readers that Abraham
was justified before God by faith.
Second – he wants to tell his readers
that this same justification of Abraham is the same justification for everybody
who is in Christ.
Paul makes it clear that the case of Abraham is the
most dramatic and outstanding example of how God chooses to provide the
righteousness needed to be saved. Abraham is an example of the whole process of
God regarding justification by faith. If you want to know how to be saved, or
justified, study Abraham.
So, really what Paul is saying and what you need to
know is that the information provided about Abraham is not limited or confined
to Abraham.
This is the clarification that Paul is making here.
What was true about Abraham is true of every man who has ever been, is being
now, or ever will be reconciled to God and saved.
Justification by faith is the only way that God
justifies man. No man will ever be justified by his own attitude or actions.
“Therefore by
the deeds of the law no flesh – no man - will
be justified in His sight…” (Romans 3:20, NKJV)
“…being
justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.”
(Romans 3:24, NKJV)
No sacrament, no baptism, no cooperation with God,
no infusion of grace, no penance, no works, no sacrifice, no act of obedience
will ever provide the righteousness and justification that is required to enter
into the presence of God.
So, Paul is telling the Romans that they are not to
look at Abraham’s experience and conclude that this was exceptional or strange
or even odd.
“…it was not written for his sake alone…but also for
us…”
This clarification was written and meant for anybody
who believes the same way Abraham did. If you believe that way Abraham believed
you will be justified just like Abraham was justified.
Paul
finished his clarification and comes back to his main theme. And that is the
method or means of justification by faith alone.
Let’s
move to…
3B The Definition of God’s Promise
What is this faith that justifies? Truly this is the
$64,000.00 question. How can a man be just with God? How do we define
justifying faith?
Job asked this question centuries ago. Bildad made
the statement, “…the dwelling place of
the wicked will come to nothing.” Another way of saying this would be, “the
house of the wicked will be destroyed.”
Job’s response to this statement was, “…how can a man be righteous before God?”
Or, “…how can a person be declared
innocent in the eyes of God?”
Job wanted to know and people ever since have wanted
to know how they can have their sins forgiven. How can a man face God? How can
a man approach God in prayer? How can a man face death without fear? How can a
man think of the coming judgment without being deathly afraid?
This is what Martin Luther often said was the
“crucial question of man.” This is really what Christianity is all about. How
can I be square with my maker when I die and stand before him?
There is a great scene in the movie “The Green
Mile.” A well liked criminal was executed in an electric chair. But an immature
and cruel guard fixed it so that the execution would be drawn out and more
painful. Then when the body was being wheeled away on a gurney he was messing
around it and saying hateful things. Another guard grabbed this guard and said,
“Leave him alone, he is square with the house now.”
What he meant was he committed a heinous crime and
his punishment was to die and he was killed. That makes him square or even.
Well that is only the human mind rejecting scripture
and trying to find a way to answer the age old question, how can a man be just
before God? It is not paying for your crime nor dying in an electric chair.
Justifying
faith believes the promise of God. The promise of God originates in this
lengthy discussion that Paul has written in these first four chapters of his
letter to the Romans. The promise of God is clarified by Paul to ensure that no
one thinks this promise is for Abraham alone. The promise of God is defined
specifically to demonstrate that justification is by faith and faith alone.
Our theme is Christians
believe God.
This
is a good reminder for us all that faith
in God is the critical element of Christianity.
Application: The Jews sought a righteousness by their own
efforts. They did not realize that keeping the law or by personal effort would
they ever be justified. Do not make the same mistake and attempt to earn your justification
with God and don’t think Abraham was a rare case. If you believe like he
believed you are justified.
The
second principle suggested by our passage is…
2A Justifying Faith Believes God’s Person (VS. 24a)
What then, is this faith that justifies?
It is a faith that believes God
“It was not written for his sake alone it shall be
imputed to us who believes in him…”
This faith that Paul is talking about is a faith in
God. I know that we often are told by people who are not believers that they
“believe in God.” Our response, which is a correct response is usually, “You
believe that there is one God. You do well. Even the demons believe – and
tremble!” (James 2:19, NKJV)
And
that is true. There is more than just believing God exists. What means is that
this is a faith that believes God’s word. It is a belief that is concerned
about the person of God.
It is not a simple acknowledgment of God, a “hey, I
know you exist, and you are there.” It is a belief in Him that evokes a
response. That response is faith and
obedience to Him as God. There is a difference.
Everything starts with God, including salvation. It
was God who elected those who would be saved to be saved. Salvation starts with
God. God saves through Jesus Christ. All the work that Jesus did by his death
and resurrection was to bring us to God, it was designed to reconcile us with
God. God is the starting point for faith. God is the beginning of Christianity.
Christianity and salvation does not begin with you
or even with Jesus Christ. It begins with God the Father.
We are told to “believe on him that raised up Jesus
our Lord from the dead.”
Justifying
faith is a faith that believes God. The starting point is believing God.
Our theme is Christians
believe God.
This
is a good reminder for us all that faith
in God is the critical element of Christianity.
Application: Hebrews 11:6 says, "But without
faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that
He is, and that He is a
rewarder of those who diligently seek Him." We must diligently seek to know all that
God wants us to do and then gladly do it.
So, justifying faith believes in the God’s Promises and it also
believes in God’s Person or Nature. Thirdly….
3A Justifying faith believes God’s Plan (Vs. 24b)
“…who raised up
Jesus our Lord from the dead.”
Now Paul… Refines God’s Plan
Paul wants to narrow down this matter of belief.
This belief in God is a belief in the resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Paul narrows this down or refines it to a specific
plan of God. Why?
Paul is concerned about the plan in which a man is
reconciled to God. Look at what he
says,
“…it shall be imputed to us who believe in Him who
raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead.”
Justifying faith is a belief in God, but not just a
simple belief in God or in God.
What does Paul believe that God has said in the
resurrection of Jesus Christ?
This is a very crucial question!
Our theme is Christians
believe God.
This
is a good reminder for us all that faith
in God is the critical element of Christianity.
So, justifying faith believes in the God’s Promises and it also
believes in God’s Person or Nature, and it believes in God’s Plan. Fourth
4A Justifying Faith Believes in God’s Purpose
It seems to me that in this phrase Paul says three
(3) very important things:
1B God’s Purpose Included a Realization
First thing he says – Jesus is Lord
Look carefully at his wording. “…who believe in him
who raised up Jesus our Lord…”
Not Jesus our Savior but Jesus our Lord. Paul is
asserting that the resurrection is a proclamation of the indisputable fact that
Jesus is Lord!
Jesus is Master – Lord – ruler over all things. His
resurrection was the stamp of God on his divine authority.
The resurrection is the final proof, if any proof is
needed, that Jesus is the Son of God, and that he is the Lord of Lords.
So,
what or who is a Christian? What is true of the man who has been reconciled to
God and justified by faith? He is a man who believes that Jesus of Nazareth is
the Son of God. He believes what God has said in the word about the person of
His son.
You
cannot be a Christian unless you are clear about the person of Jesus Christ.
You must believe that Jesus Christ is the Lord of Glory, that He is the eternal
son of God and that he is one in substance with God the Father.
It
is God, through His HS through the Word of God that reveals this truth to you.
So,
justifying faith believes in the plan of God. The first thing you must believe
is that Jesus is Lord.
[The
second thing Paul says is…]
2B God’s Purpose Included a
Rejection
“…delivered up because of our offenses...”
This is quite a statement! I think we need to look at it very carefully!
First of all notice – that Paul did not simply say
“Jesus died.” It is a known fact that Jesus did die. But this is not the way a
Christian who believes that Christ died states this fact.
The question is “What do you belief about the death of Jesus?”
The bible says he, Jesus was “delivered
up.”
Quite a word delivered. It is the same word that you
find in 8:32, “He spared not His own Son but delivered Him up for us all.”
First of all, it was God who delivered
Jesus up.
What does it
mean he was delivered up?
The word delivered is the Greek word paradidwmi
It was used of
casting into prison and giving someone up to justice. It gives us the idea of
the judicial act of God giving up His Son to the justice that required
satisfaction for sin and to pay the penalty that was due for sin, which was
death.
God handed Jesus over to justice so that believers
could experience the forgiveness of their sins. The promises of redemption and
deliverance made by God could only be fulfilled or accomplished by the
suffering and death of His son. God handed Jesus over to death.
This is what makes much of today such a farce and a
day of foolishness. A huge number of people are “celebrating” or commemorating
today as a day that they recognize that a real and historical person named
Jesus died on a cross and was raised from the dead after spending three (3)
days in the grace.
But they don’t believe the
right thing about the death of Jesus Christ:
Why was Jesus delivered up or handed over to death
by God? It was for or because of our offenses. Because of our sin!
This word offense is the Greek word paraptwma.
It means “to
fall beside or near something” or “to deviate from the truth and uprightness” –
a sin.
God handed Jesus over to death for a specific
reason. For our sins. Not for any general reason.
A true Christian believes Jesus was handed over to
death by God because of their specific sins. Many who “celebrate” today do not
believe and would not believe that Jesus was killed because of or for them.
So they make it a farce by thinking that the Romans
were upset at Jesus or the Jews, more specifically the Pharisees and religious
leaders plotted to have Jesus put to death, but because he was the good guy
with the white hat God raised him from the dead and now we celebrate this
resurrection of Jesus.
But get specific with them and say God handed Jesus
over to death and to justice because of their sins and see what they believe.
So,
justifying faith believes in the plan of God. The first thing you must believe
is that Jesus is Lord. The second thing that you must believe is that God
handed Jesus over to death for your sins. Paul says that there is a third thing
you must believe:
3B God’s Purpose Included a Resurrection
“…and was raised
again for our justification.”
What does Paul mean?
In chapter five and verse nine (5:9) it says:
“Much more then, having now been justified by His
blood, we shall be saved from wrath through Him.”
Paul is not contradicting himself! You cannot
separate the death and the resurrection.
Why did God raise Jesus from the dead? Jesus’ death
satisfied God’s holy wrath and anger. The penalty for sin had been paid.
Why raise him from the dead? The resurrection of
Jesus was the loud proclamation by God of the fact that God was fully and
completely satisfied with what Jesus did on the cross.
The last thing Jesus said
while on the cross was, “It is finished!”
Jesus knew that all that was necessary to satisfied
God was finished. The people watching the crucifixion heard him say it was
finished.
But Jesus died. He was buried. He was lying in a
grave. The people thought he was gone, it was over, his mission cut short by
his death. Even his family, friends, and disciples thought it was over.
Listen to these pitiful, defeated, words, “But
we were hoping that it was He who was going to redeem Israel...” (Luke
24:21)
God raised Jesus from the dead! God was satisfied!
His wrath was appeased! His law was fulfilled.
If
Jesus had not risen from the dead we might have reason to think that God was
not satisfied with the death of Jesus. We might have thought our sins weren’t
fully forgiven.
But he was raised from the
dead. Jesus completed the work.
God declares believers just – or declares us to be
righteous. We are declared to have the righteousness required by God to enter
into the kingdom of God, to enter into heaven and to enter into the presence of
God.
Justification is a declaration by God about our
standing based on the resurrection of Jesus from the dead.
You cannot be a Christian without believing that God
physically raised Jesus from the dead.
Believers are justified by the fact that the debt,
the penalty for their sin has been paid for, that God is appeased and no longer
angry. The proof for this declaration is found in the physical resurrection of
Jesus Christ from the dead.
This
is the statement that is made by the resurrection of Jesus from the dead. This
is what we as true believers celebrate every day of the week, not once a year.
The resurrection proclaims that Jesus Christ is the Son of God that Jesus died,
and had to die in order to make atonement for our sins; that Jesus has risen
from the dead and has taken His rightful seat at the right hand of God the
Father in glory!
When
God raised Jesus physically from the dead this was the statement he made!
So
a believer in order to have justifying faith must stop trying to earn,
purchase, deserve, warrant or merit his salvation. He must stop all works. He
must belief that and rest in the fact that Jesus was handed over to death and
justice and that God raised Him from the dead in order to be a true Christian.
A
true Christian does not try to justify himself by penance, sacrament, or works.
How
do you know if you have justifying faith? How do you know if you are a true or
real Christian?
·
You must believe that Jesus is Lord of and over all things &you
·
You must believe that God handed Jesus over to death for your sins
·
You must believe that God physically raised Jesus from the dead
Our theme is Christians
believe God.
This
is a good reminder for us all that faith
in God is the critical element of Christianity.
[What
do you say we wrap this up?]
CONCLUSION
Bold
shall I stand in thy great day;
For
who aught to my charge shall lay?
Fully
through Thee absolved I am
From
sin and fear, from guilt and shame.
(Zinzendorf)
The
terrors of law and of God
With
me can have nothing to do;
My
Savior’s obedience and blood
Hide
all my transgressions from view.
(Toplady)
Exhortation: I
exhort you this morning to believe that Jesus is Lord, that God handed Jesus
over to death and justice for your sins, and that God physically raised Jesus
from the dead.
Paul wrote in Romans 8:31-34
“What then
shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us? He did
not spare His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, who shall He not with
Him also freely give us all things? Who shall bring a charge against God’s
elect? It is God who justifies. Who is he who condemns? It is Christ who died,
and furthermore is also risen, who is even at the right hand of God, who makes
intercession for us.”
Let’s
pray! J
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