Saturday 21 August 2010

Romans 5: 1 (for the last time... until next time).

Romans 5: 1 “... peace with God, through our Lord Jesus Christ.”


For a third time we can visit this verse and consider something more. We are justified by faith we know. We are also consequently at peace (or have peace) with God where once there was enmity. This process is by grace – our salvation, every part of it, is an act of grace. We have also established that this grace can only be imparted to us because of the Lord Jesus Christ’s propitiatory death and his glorious resurrection. The sacrifice made in atonement has allowed us to reach this state of being considered worthy in His sight, again, only as we are clothed in His righteousness.

Now while it may seem to be revisiting a point already made, these things are made possible through not only the Lord Jesus Christ but, note Paul’s words, our Lord Jesus Christ. Our personal saviour and our corporate high priest. Verse one is such a complete statement, in just 15 words Paul manages to convey and underscore so many essential aspects of our salvation. The sentence would be correct without adding ‘through our Lord Jesus Christ’. Paul has already in Romans 3 completely established our depravity and in chapter 4 he has incisively stated our justification can only be through faith, using Abraham as an example. He also underlines that out righteousness before God is imputed to us, never earned.

So again, the mention that this is achieved ‘through our Lord Jesus Christ’ is unnecessary to our understanding of the process of justification. So why add it?

Well firstly and fore mostly it is a comment surely of praise and glorification. Paul is reminding the Romans of the essential vehicle of salvation that is both the man and the Lord Jesus Christ. In all things we should include the wonder working power of Jesus and His blood. It is not enough to merely comment on the functions and legality of atonement, propitiation and justification. It is not enough to merely describe the peace in our souls gained where once there was hostility. The Lord Jesus Christ “delivered for our offences and raised again for our justification” stands astride all this in His Glory. He straddles the eternity between condemnation and salvation as a bridge for us to access eternal life. He is the peacemaker and doorway through whom we can be justified.

To omit His name is to defame His part in the process! (for without Him there would be no process!) To pay lip service to the name of Jesus is not enough! His name should not sneak quietly from the corner of our mouths or be added to a prayer as an almost forgotten addendum! We should in all things praise and magnify His name!

Paul was not merely reminding us of who our intercessor is. He is not even being repetitious or verbose in his wording. He is reinforcing and reminding the Romans and us of who achieved this wondrous work. Not some faceless god, not a legal action performed behind closed doors, but our loving, all sufficient Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ. One whose name should leap fully from our mouths in praise and adoration at every possible turn. Paul was making an unambiguous statement in verse 1 of this fifth chapter, but in it he is also posing a question.

Are you adding His name to all that you do?

Is it lip service?

Are you giving Him the praise his gift of eternal life and joy should merit?

Do it today Christian, do it in everything you do!

Romans 5 blogs

Having had a little feedback on my last 2 posts I'd like to ask a favour from anyone who reads this blog regularly - make a comment please... or email me.

I'll explain why.

I write these blogs primarily as a way of ordering my thoughts and sharing them with anyone who is willing to hear them. I find that they help me to take ideas that are whizzing around my head and by presenting them to others put them in a way that a) is theologically sound, b) glorifies God, c) helps me make sense of it all. In short it helps me distil my thoughts and share them.

Posts made from here on about Romans 5 are mine and mine alone. I didn't use any commentaries in the writing of the last 2 and will continue to write them 'solo'. That being them case any constructive comments or criticisms will be gratefully received.

Thanks in advance... next up... "through our Lord Jesus Christ." Romans 5: 1 (again!)

It may be some time before I get to Romans 6! But then again with such a rich text to study, why rush?!

Friday 13 August 2010

Romans 5:1b 'peace with God'

Romans 5: 1b “...we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.”


In my last post I hope we identified how our justification is achieved and that it is all by grace and not in any part by our works. It is a complete work of His and not of us. This has now allowed, or afforded us, ‘peace with God’. The act of repentance is turning from sin, literally to turn away. Just as the Israelites left Egypt and were not to look back, or ‘return’ to Egypt, and as Lot leaving Sodom was to not look back, neither should we.

This ‘peace with God’ is achieved first through reconciliation. This reconciliation is with God where before there was hate and enmity. As we turn in repentance, He too turns to reconcile us to Himself and shines His countenance upon us. Once again it is God who does the work here. He comes to us. He is/was the offended party and the reconciliation is His to give. Our hate, spite and ungodliness was/is an affront to Him, deserving of divine wrath and judgement. Hoeksema put it (my paraphrase) that God’s ‘hate’ of sin is rather a ‘holy NO’. He cannot hate as we understand the word, for to hate is to sin. His wrath, His hate and anger are divine and holy. God will not have sin, the price must be paid the propitiation must be made. His non tolerance of sin is an everlasting, eternal ‘NO’. There cannot be a more definite, consistent refusal.

Peace with God is not possible without Christ’s intervention. Our enmity and our sinful disposition put us on the wrathful end of this holy NO. Again, in Romans 3: 10 - 18 we get an explanation of why. ‘None are righteous’ (v10), ‘no one seeks God’ (v11b) and there is ‘no fear of God in their eyes’ (v18). Our nature is at war with God’s prior to our salvation. Our sin despises Him and seeks to keep us facing away from Him; it is comfortable in keeping its back to the sunrise of God’s glory.

‘But now’ (Romans 3: 21) Jesus has satisfied the wrath. The lamb was slain and our sins pardoned by the holy scapegoat Son of God. ‘Therefore’ (v1a) we can be justified, we can be clothed in His raiment, dressed in Jesus’ own righteousness and presented worthy in God’s sight. This and this alone grants us access to the Almighty.

To ‘have peace’ is to truly be with Him. To be in His presence ‘through our Lord Jesus Christ’ is to know peace. Peace in our mind, heart, body and soul. It is an all enveloping, complete peace that can only be found in His presence and in having full assurance that the work is finished, that we do not need to rely on ourselves to receive or earn His love and grace. Once more the work is His and the list of God’s grace to us grows longer – to be with Him, to be in His presence, to offer sacrifices of prayer and praise are further benefits of having peace with Him, all enmity dead and gone.

To be with Him Christian! Consider that.

In Jesus’ complete work you are not just afforded salvation from the condemnation of your sin, not just justified in His sight, not just made whole and worthy, not just to be ultimately glorified, not just to be an heir and adopted son, not just clothed in Jesus righteousness, not just full of His grace and love. You are granted God’s full and blessed peace... and all in His presence.

Oh what a Saviour, oh to be with Him.

Thursday 12 August 2010

Romans 5: 1

Well I sat and watched Zulu. Then I had a short bible study and prayer time on the beatitudes (Matthew 5: 1 - 12). Then I remembered my earlier mention of reopening my studies on Romans. So having read the whole chapter I scrutinsed the first verse a little closer, and felt prompted to scrawl this. I apologise for any disjointed theology or spelling/grammar I haven't properly proof read it. I shall do so when my head has stopped spinning - it took me twice as long to type it up as it did to write it!!! I hope you benefit from it somehow...

 “Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.”

Romans 5: 1

‘Therefore’ – this ‘therefore’ can be considered in context rather like the ‘But now’ at the start of Romans 3: 21. ‘As a consequence of’ or ‘resulting from’ an action not of our own, but of Christ’s. Romans 3: 21 is fundamental in our redemption as it explains to us in no uncertain terms how the new covenant is established. ‘It was like this... but now it is like this...’ (Though the Jews would have required faith too, a lone reliance on adherence to the law was still justification by works).

Romans 3: 10 - 18 outlines how we are all under sin and condemned by our nature, ‘there is none righteous, no, not one’. We must first recognise, through the Holy Spirit’s prompting, our true state and the uselessness of our reliance on works. We cannot, Paul says, justify ourselves by any means. Christ alone can satisfy for our sins and none other but He. (Romans 3: 1 - 20)

So through, or by God’s righteousness imparted to us through Jesus Christ’s atonement, we can be saved, made acceptable in His sight. ‘But now’ Christ has become our great high priest and intercessor.

Romans 3 describes how ‘by works of the law’ (3: 20) no man can be justified. And ‘(but) now’ His righteousness has been manifested apart from the law we can be clothed as righteous through faith and faith alone in Christ’s propitiation. Christ being 'put' (ESV) or 'set' (KJV) forth by God for His purposes. Therefore by faith alone we are justified. This not being an action of our own, but once again, it is an action of Him and Him alone. While we possess faith it is only a faith given to us by grace. Just as we are graciously afforded our redemption, justified with undeserved merit.

This ‘peace’ then with God (5:1) is ‘through our Lord Jesus Christ’, He is once again all sufficient. Not only is He now our high priest and intercessor, not only is He made propitiation for our iniquities, not only as a spotless lamb put forth by God for us! He is also our faith and our conduit for receiving God’s grace and peace. What a complete saviour! What a masterful work!

Every part of our salvation is by Him, just as “all things were created by Him and for Him” (Colossians 1: 16) so are we. In every part He has control and dominion, a truly sovereign Lord. Our conviction, rebirth, justification, sanctification, faith and ultimate glorification is His. We are unable to do any part of it ourselves – “for by works... no human being will be justified...” (Romans 3: 20 ESV), “by deeds... shall no flesh be justified in His sight.” (KJV).

‘Therefore’ we are left with so little required of us – simple obedience, prayer and praise. The work is complete! Rejoice and be glad Christian that your salvation depends solely on a gracious, loving, Sovereign Lord and not on your own sinful, fallible, disobedient self!

What I'm doing...

While this may seem a little 'facbook status' or 'twitter', I have pinched this idea from Kim's blog Hiraeth and will shamelessly use it for my own post today! A neat way of summarising things at da ig bear's house...

Wondering - should Christians be on Facebook? I find useful, frustrating, irritating, narcissistic and entertaining in equal measure. Hmmmm...

Liking - my summer holidays, 6 weeks of freedom! Woop!

Disliking - my summer holiday being nearly halfway done! Boo!

Reading - A W Pink on Elijah, food for the soul. Many, many lessons to be learned from Elijah's story. Not least that "God does not grant fresh revelations until there has been a compliance with those already receieved..." Think Noah, Abraham, Moses, Elijah... all were required to adhere to a command before the next was issued.

WatchingZulu.. Classic line "Hitch... Hitch I've seen you... you're alive!"
In real life 11 Victoria Crosses were awarded that day in 1879. 150 Brits vs 4000 Zulus... Valley boys like a fight see. (Actually they were the 24th (2nd Warwickshire) Regiment of Foot, which later became the South Wales Borderers in 1881).

Thinking - I have too many books to read. I should stop buying them until I've finished the ones I have!!!

Drinking - coffee which makes me hyperactive. And root beer, I love root beer :)

Studying - admittedly gone off the boil here. Will restart Romans today I think.

Training - my back and hip are sore again :( my choker chain has kicked in again, forcing me to rest.

Thanking God - for our fellowship at Fole. A small, but gracious and blessed church with sound biblical teaching. True brothers and sisters in Christ.

Wednesday 11 August 2010

It is a thing most wonderful

We sang this on Sunday evening and I found it very moving. I hadn't heard it or sung it for years and years, but it did my soul good. It is essentially a children's hymn (or is so listed), but surely a hymn is a hymn is a hymn?

We are told to come with child like faith aren't we? Sometimes... no, much of the time we over complicate our salvation and make it a complex literary task to decipher the bible. In fact, in truth the gospel message is so so simple... so simple even a child can understand.

It is a thing most wonderful,
Almost too wonderful to be,
That God’s own Son should come from Heav’n,
And die to save a child like me.

And yet I know that it is true;
He chose a poor and humble lot,
And wept, and toiled, and mourned, and died,
For love of those who loved Him not.

I cannot tell how He could love
A child so weak and full of sin;
His love must be most wonderful,
If He could die my love to win.

I sometimes think about the cross,
And shut my eyes, and try to see
The cruel nails, and crown of thorns,
And Jesus crucified for me.

But even could I see Him die,
I could but see a little part
Of that great love which, like a fire
Is always burning in His heart.
It is most wonderful to know
His love for me so free and sure;
But ’tis more wonderful to see
My love for Him so faint and poor.

And yet I want to love Thee, Lord;
O light the flame within my heart,
And I will love thee more and more,
Until i see Thee as Thou art.

William Walsham How (1823 - 97)