Tuesday, March 15, 2016

15 March 2016

Scripture: Romans 5:1-11

Observations:

So, Paul begins at the tail end of yesterday: because we have been justified by our faith, we have peace with God and have access into his grace. Having access to his grace, we rejoice in hope of the glory of God. (vv 1-2)

Here comes one of Paul's trickier, loaded statements: we rejoice in our sufferings

  • Sufferings --> endurance
  • Endurance --> character
  • Character --> hope (vv 3-4)
Hope, Paul writes, does not put us to shame. Why? Because God's love has been poured into our hearts via the Holy Spirit (v 5)

Paul then breaks down the idea of God's love.
  • When Christ died for us sinners, we were still weak, unable to save ourselves (v 6)
  • While we humans may consider dying for the sake of another who is exceptionally good or righteous, Christ died for us while we were still living in sin, distant from him in disobedience. (vv 7-8)
Christ did for us, his then enemies, what we could not do for ourselves. In doing so, he modeled what love looks like - sacrificial and unconditional.

The effect of Christ's sacrifice, offering justification on our behalf, is that we are saved from God's wrath and judgment. (v 9) Paul presents it interestingly. If we are considered to have been reconciled to God by Christ's death, then we are saved (Gk: σώζω - saved [from death, peril], delivered, protected, healed) by his life. (v 10) Some scholars assert that this means that because Christ lives, we are eternally saved. So, we are justified by his death (that is, freed from all consequences of past and present sin) and secured by his resurrection (that is, no future sin will affect our standing before God), is what Paul seems to be saying.

Paul wraps up this segment with rejoicing. He began by speaking of rejoicing in suffering and the hope of the glory of God and he ends by speaking of rejoicing in God in gratitude for our reconciliation. (v 11) In between the "bread slices" of rejoicing, we have the filling of our literary sandwich - the reason for rejoicing in suffering, the magnitude of God's love in dying for sinners, and the reconciling and saving effects of Jesus' death and resurrection.

Application:

I'll be honest. This passage is one I have difficulty seeing how to apply. The only thing I can think of is gratitude to God for acting in such mercy. He didn't have to, but because he loved us so much, he did.

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