|
table
of contents | previous chapter | next
chapter | bottom of page | buy
this book | home
You are welcome to download, print, copy, distribute or transmit this document by any means, as long as the document is unaltered and kept its entirety, and is not sold for profit. Should you have received this document from someone else, you may want to get your own original copy at www.shepherdserve.org just to be certain you have an unaltered copy. The actual book itself may be ordered by clicking the link above. ©2006 by David Servant
NINE
Striving Against Sin
“Sin is crouching at the door; and
its desire is for you, but you must master it” (Gen. 4:7, emphasis added).
As was pointed out in the previous
chapter, our sanctification is a joint effort on the part of God and ourselves.
We grow to be progressively more like Jesus as we cooperate with the Father. He
provides our ability and motivation to be holy. His “divine power has granted
to us everything pertaining to life and godliness” (2 Pet. 1:3, emphasis added). He gives us a new
nature and leads us by His indwelling Spirit. But He still leaves something
for us to do. We still have a
free will. We must follow the Spirit who indwells us, and this every true
Christian does to some degree. Otherwise, he shows himself to be a counterfeit
believer (see Rom. 8:5-14).
It is also our responsibility to renew
our minds with God’s Word, for we must know His will before we can do it. Even
in that, God helps us through the teaching ministry of the Holy Spirit and
through divinely-anointed human teachers. As our minds are renewed with His
truth, we are transformed (see John 8:31-36; Rom. 12:2). And, of course, we
also have the responsibility of being not just hearers of the word, but doers
(see Jas. 1:22).
This balance we must maintain.
Although Scripture speaks of both human and divine responsibility, too many
emphasize one at the other’s neglect. Historically, to the one side are the
pietists, who strive to be holy in their own strength. To the other side are
the quietists, who are abhorred with the idea of human striving, and who leave
everything in God’s lap. Both sides are armed with long lists of scriptures,
and if they’d each only take a look at the other side’s list, they’d realize
they’re both right and both wrong. The truth lies in the middle, where both
lists are given equal honor. Perhaps no single scripture expresses this balance
better than Philippians 2:12-13:
So then, my beloved, just as you have always obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now much more in
my absence, work out your salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God who is at work in you, both to will and to work for His good pleasure
(emphasis added).
The fruit that the Spirit produces
within us is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
gentleness and self-control, but only with our cooperation will these fruit be
manifest in our lives. We must do something, because, according to Scripture,
there are at least three forces that oppose the fruit:
(1) God has allowed us to remain “in
the world,” a world that tempts us to be unloving, downcast, anxious,
impatient, unkind, evil, unfaithful, harsh and self-indulgent.
(2) Although God has filled us with
His Spirit, given us a new nature and broken sin’s power over us, He has also
allowed a residue of the old sinful nature to remain in us, what Paul called
“the flesh.”
(3) Although we have been delivered
from Satan’s kingdom and are no longer his spiritual offspring, we find
ourselves, like the Christians of old, in an arena filled with roaring lions
who desire to devour us (see 1 Peter 5:8). Satan and his demons harass and
tempt us to do what God forbids.
These three are our enemies: the
world, the flesh, and the devil.
Why Has
God Left Us in Enemy Territory?
If God desires our holiness, why has
He allowed these enemies to live among us? What divine purpose do they serve?
Like the wicked nations God permitted
to remain in Israel’s land after Joshua’s death, our enemies are also allowed
to remain that God might test us (see Judges 2:20-3:1). By them our love and
obedience, and thus our faith, are tested. Faith can only be tested where
unbelief is possible. Love can be tested only when hatred is an alternative.
Obedience can only be tested where disobedience is possible.
To the ancient Israelites God said:
If a prophet or a dreamer of dreams
arises among you and gives you a sign or a wonder, and the sign or the wonder
comes true, concerning which he spoke to you, saying, ‘Let us go after other
gods (whom you have not known) and let us serve them,’ you shall not listen to
the words of that prophet or that dreamer of dreams; for the Lord your God is
testing you to find out if you love the Lord your God with all your heart and
with all your soul. You shall follow the Lord your God and fear Him; and you
shall keep His commandments, listen to His voice, serve Him, and cling to Him
(Deut. 13:1-4).
Incredibly, God tested His people by
means of a false prophet! But does He not possess all knowledge as well as
perfect foreknowledge? Why then is there need of a test?
The reason is this: in order for God
to foreknow the outcome of a free moral agent’s test, that free moral agent
must be tested at some point in time. Only what can be known in time can be
foreknown before time. Consequently, our temptations, tests and trials, limited
by time and space, serve a purpose in the plan of the One who lives outside
time and space. They provide the means whereby our faith is proved genuine.
Peter wrote to Christians under fire:
In this you greatly rejoice, even
though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been distressed by
various trials, that the proof of your faith, being more precious than gold which is
perishable, even though tested by fire, may be found to result in praise and
glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ....Beloved, do not be
surprised at the fiery ordeal among you, which comes upon you for your
testing, as though some strange
thing were happening to you; but to the degree that you share the sufferings of
Christ, keep on rejoicing; so that also at the revelation of His glory, you may
rejoice with exultation (1 Pet. 1:6-7; 4:12-13, emphasis added).
If for no other reason, we should
rejoice under persecution because it allows us the opportunity to show our
enduring faith. Saving faith perseveres, but faith can persevere only if there
is opposition and temptation not to persevere.
What is
Our Responsibility?
Because modern evangelical theology
has become so contaminated with antinomian ideas that distort God’s grace and
nullify human responsibility, today too many professing Christians piously pass
off their biblical responsibilities to God. Beguiled by false teaching about
grace, to them any mention of human effort is considered anathema, and under
the subtle guise of defending God’s glory, they label any teaching about
holiness as legalism. Works is
a dirty word that doesn’t belong in a Christian’s vocabulary. And certainly we
don’t want to entertain any thought that we must do anything now that Christ’s
work is finished. That would be adding works (God forbid!) to our salvation!
In hopes to remedy this unscriptural
reasoning, I’ve compiled a list of what a significant portion of the New
Testament says that believers should do. The essential component of human responsibility in the
sanctification process is easily understood from the many scriptures that
contain commandments and instructions. When we read them, we can no longer
doubt that Christians are free moral agents who can will to be holy. Likewise,
exposed is the folly of those who want us to believe that God is robbed of
glory when we add our efforts toward sanctification. Clearly, God expects those
who possess His Holy Spirit to do certain things by the power of the Spirit. Stated succinctly, we must strive against sin in all its forms (see Heb.
12:4). We must pursue the
sanctification “without which no one will see the Lord” (Heb. 12:14).
The following list reveals, from the
four Gospels and the book of Romans, God’s expectations for our behavior. If
the New Testament states that a certain behavior is wrong or sinful, then God
obviously holds people accountable for such behavior, indicating that human
responsibility is a factor in that wrong behavior.
Although you might be tempted to skip
over the following list, for your own benefit I ask that you read it slowly. It
can impact you in a way that could be life changing.
What does God expect us to do? Here is
a list. Clearly, none of these
things will happen in our lives unless we do what God says.
God expects us to:
Not tempt Him
(Matt. 4:7).
Worship the Lord
our God and serve Him only (Matt. 4:10).
Repent in order to
be saved (Matt. 4:17).
Rejoice and be glad
when we are persecuted (Matt. 5:12).
Let our lights
shine before men so they may see our good works (Matt. 5:16).
Keep and teach
God’s commandments, even the least of them (Matt. 5:19).
Not murder, hate,
or harm another person in any way (Matt. 5:21-22).
Work toward
reconciliation with those we’ve offended (Matt. 5:24-25).
Not commit adultery
or be lustful (Matt. 5:27-28).
Remove anything that
causes us to stumble into sin (Matt. 5:29-30).
Not divorce except
for cases of unrepentant unchastity (Matt. 5:32).
Make no swearing
oaths and never lie, but always keep our word (Matt. 5:33-37).
Not take our own
revenge, but be extremely tolerant of others, even doing good to those who
mistreat us (Matt. 5:38-42).
Love our enemies
and pray for our persecutors (Matt. 5:44-47).
Strive to be
perfect (Matt. 5:48).
Do no good deed for
the purpose of receiving the praise of others (Matt. 6:1).
Give alms (Matt.
6:2-4).
Pray (Matt. 6:5-6).
Not use meaningless
repetition when we pray (Matt. 6:7).
Pray after the
pattern of “the Lord’s prayer” (Matt. 6:9-13).
Forgive others
(Matt. 6:14).
Fast (Matt. 6:16).
Not lay up
treasures upon earth, but lay them up in heaven (Matt. 6:19-21).
Serve God and not
money (Matt. 6:24).
Not worry about our
material needs (Matt. 6:25-32).
Seek first God’s
kingdom and righteousness (Matt. 6:33).
Not judge others
(Matt. 7:1-5).
Not give what is
holy to dogs (Matt. 7:6).
Ask, seek and knock
(Matt. 7:7-11).
Do for others what
we want them to do for us (Matt. 7:12).
Enter by the narrow
gate (Matt. 7:13).
Beware of false
prophets (Matt. 7:15-20).
Do what Jesus said
or face destruction (Matt. 7:24-27).
Beseech the Lord to
send out workers into His harvest (Matt. 9:38).
Confess Jesus
before others and not deny Him (Matt. 10:32-33).
Love Jesus more
than our closest relatives (Matt. 10:37).
Take up our cross
and follow Jesus (Matt. 10:38).
Lose our life for
Jesus’ sake (Matt. 10:39).
Take Jesus’ yoke
upon us (Matt. 11:28-30).
Be “for” Jesus and
gather with Him (Matt. 12:30).
Not blaspheme the
Holy Spirit (Matt. 12:31).
Do the will of the
Father (Matt. 12:50).
Honor our parents
(Matt. 15:4-6).
Not be defiled by
evil thoughts, murder, adultery, fornication, theft, lying and slandering
(Matt. 15:19-20).
Deny ourselves
(Matt. 16:24).
Be converted and
become like children, humbling ourselves (Matt. 18:3-4).
Not cause any child
who believes in Jesus to stumble (Matt. 18:6).
Cause no one to
stumble (Matt. 18:7).
Not despise any
children (Matt. 18:10).
Rebuke in private
any brother who sins against us (Matt. 18:15).
Obey Jesus’
instructions regarding church discipline (Matt. 18:16-17).
Forgive our
brothers from our hearts (Matt. 18:35).
Love our neighbor as
ourselves (Matt. 19:19).
Be the servant of
others (Matt. 20:26-28).
Pay our
government’s rightful taxes and give to God what is His (Matt. 22:21).
Love the Lord our
God with all our hearts, souls and minds (Matt. 22:37).
Allow no one to
call us “teacher,” or “leader,” and call no one our father but our heavenly
Father (Matt. 23:8-10).
Not exalt but
humble ourselves (Matt. 23:12).
Hinder no one from
entering God’s kingdom (Matt. 23:13).
Never take
advantage of widows (Matt. 23:14).
Never influence
others to act hypocritically (Matt. 23:15).
Not neglect the
weightier provisions of the law, such as justice, mercy and faithfulness (Matt.
23:23).
Not be hypocritical
in any way (Matt. 23:25-28).
Not be frightened
about wars and rumors of wars prior to Jesus’ return (Matt. 24:6).
Not fall away, or
betray or hate a brother (Matt. 24:10).
Not allow ourselves
to be misled by false prophets (Matt. 24:11).
Not allow our love
to grow cold because of the increase of lawlessness (Matt. 24:12).
Endure to the end
(Matt. 24:13).
Not believe false
reports about the return of Christ (Matt. 24:23-26).
Recognize the true
signs of Christ’s return (Matt. 24:32-33).
Be on the alert for
Christ’s return (Matt. 24:42).
Always be a
faithful and sensible slave, anticipating our Lord’s imminent return, never
backsliding but always obeying Him (Matt. 24:45-51).
Utilize the time,
talents and treasures that God has entrusted to us for His service (Matt.
25:14-30).
Provide food,
drink, shelter and clothing for impoverished Christians; visit sick and
imprisoned Christians (Matt. 25:34-40).
Partake of the
Lord’s Supper (Matt. 26:26-27).
Make disciples of
all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,
teaching them to observe all that Jesus commanded (Matt. 28:19-20).
Take care what we
listen to (Mark 4:24).
Not neglect the
commandments of God in order to keep traditions (Mark 7:9).
Not be ashamed of
Jesus or His words (Mark 8:38).
Be at peace with
one another (Mark 9:50).
Not hinder children
from coming to Him (Mark 10:14).
Have faith in God
(Mark 11:22).
Believe that we
have received all things for which we pray and ask (Mark 11:24).
Beware of religious
teachers who wear clothing that makes them stand out, who like respectful
greetings, chief seats and places of honor, who take advantage of widows and
pray long prayers for appearance’s sake (Mark 12:38-40).
Not be anxious
about what we are to say when put on trial for our faith, but say what the Holy
Spirit tells us in that hour (Mark 13:11).
Be baptized (Mark
16:16).
Bless those who
curse us (Luke 6:28).
Give to everyone
who asks of us, and not demand back what others have taken from us (Luke 6:30).
Lend to others,
expecting nothing in return (Luke 6:35).
Be merciful (Luke
6:36).
Not condemn others
(Luke 6:37).
Give (Luke 6:38).
Not point out the
speck in a brother’s eye when we have a log in our own (Luke 6:41-42).
Not call Him “Lord”
unless we do what He says (Luke 6:46-49).
Receive God’s word
in our hearts and hold it fast so that we bear fruit with perseverance (Luke
8:12-15).
Hear God’s word and
do it (Luke 8:21).
Receive children in
Christ’s name (Luke 9:48).
Not look back after
putting our hands to the plow (Luke 9:62).
Ask for the Holy
Spirit (Luke 11:13).
Watch out that the
light in us may not be darkness (Luke 11:35).
Not love seats of
honor and respectful greetings (Luke 11:43).
Not weigh down
other people with hard burdens that we are unwilling to personally bear (Luke
11:46).
Not persecute His
prophets (Luke 11:49).
Not take away the
key of knowledge or hinder people from entering into true knowledge of God
(Luke 11:52).
Beware of
hypocritical religious leaders (Luke 12:1).
Not be afraid of
those who can only kill us physically (Luke 12:4).
Fear Him who after
He has killed has authority to cast into hell (Luke 12:5).
Not speak against
or blaspheme Jesus or the Holy Spirit (Luke 12:10).
Beware and be on
guard against every form of greed (Luke 12:15).
Not lay up treasure
for ourselves but be rich toward God (Luke 12:21).
Sell our
possessions and give to charity (Luke 12:33).
Bear fruit (Luke
13:6-9).
Strive to enter by
the narrow door (Luke 13:24).
Never take a place
of honor, exalting ourselves. Rather, we should humble ourselves, taking the
last seat (Luke 14:8-10).
Love Him much more
than our loved ones (Luke 14:26).
First count the
cost of becoming His disciple (Luke 14:28-32).
Put all our
material possessions under His control (Luke 14:33).
Rejoice when God
shows mercy to sinners in saving them (Luke 15:1-32).
Be faithful in
small things and with money (Luke 16:9-11).
Have compassion on
the poor (Luke 16:19-31).
Rebuke a brother if
he sins and forgive him if he repents (Luke 17:3-4).
Consider ourselves
unworthy slaves even when we’ve done everything we’ve been commanded (Luke
17:7-10).
Pray at all times
and not lose heart (Luke 18:1).
Not trust in
ourselves that we are righteous, nor view others with contempt (Luke 18:9).
Receive the kingdom
like a child (Luke 18:17).
Keep on the alert
at all times, praying in order that we may have strength to escape the trials
preceding Christ’s return and stand before Jesus (Luke 21:36).
Proclaim repentance
for the forgiveness of sins in Christ’s name to all nations (Luke 24:47).
Be born again (John
3:3).
Believe in Jesus
(John 3:16).
Worship Him in
spirit and truth (John 4:23-24).
Honor Jesus (John
5:23).
Seek glory from God
(John 5:44).
Believe Moses’
writings (John 5:46-47).
Not to work for the
food that perishes, but for the food which endures to eternal life which is
given by Jesus (John 6:27).
Eat the flesh and
drink the blood of Christ (John 6:53-54).
Not judge according
to appearance, but with righteous judgment (John 7:24).
Abide in Jesus’
word (John 8:31).
Keep Jesus’ word
(John 8:51).
Serve Jesus (John
12:26).
Love one another,
even as Jesus loves us (John 13:34).
Believe that He is
in the Father and the Father is in Him (John 14:11).
Do the works that
Jesus did and greater works (John 14:12).
Love Jesus and keep
His commandments (John 14:15).
Abide in Jesus’
love (John 15:9).
Ask Him for
anything in Jesus’ name (John 16:24).
Take courage in
tribulation (John 16:33).
This ends Jesus’ commands found in the
Gospels. These are the things that we’re supposed to be teaching Christ’s
disciples to obey (see Matt.
28:20).
The commands and instructions given to
believers in the epistles are essentially no different than what is found in
the Gospels. We next consider human responsibility from just the book of
Romans.
God expects us to:
Not suppress the
truth (Rom. 1:18).
Not be guilty of
idolatry (Rom. 1:23).
Not exchange God’s truth
for a lie (Rom. 1:25).
Not be involved in
homosexual behavior (Rom. 1:26-27).
Not be greedy,
envious, deceitful, malicious, insolent, arrogant, boastful, disobedient to our
parents, untrustworthy, unloving or unmerciful (Rom. 1:29-31).
Not gossip or slander
(Rom. 1:29-30).
Not give our
approval to those who practice sin (Rom. 1:32).
Not think lightly
of the riches of His kindness, forbearance and patience (Rom. 2:4).
Persevere in doing
good (Rom. 2:7).
Seek for glory,
honor and immortality (Rom. 2:7).
Not be selfishly
ambitious (Rom. 2:8).
Not to curse or
speak bitter words (Rom. 3:14).
Consider ourselves
dead to sin, but alive to God in Christ (Rom. 6:11).
Not let sin reign
in our bodies, obeying its desires (Rom. 6:12).
Not go on
presenting the members of our bodies to sin as instruments of unrighteousness
(Rom. 6:13).
Present ourselves
to God as those alive from the dead, and our members as instruments of
righteousness to God (Rom 6:13).
Not covet (Rom.
7:7).
Not live according
to the flesh, but put to death the deeds of the body by the Spirit (Rom.
8:12-13).
Present our bodies
a living and holy sacrifice (Rom. 12:1).
Not be conformed to
this world, but be transformed by the renewing of our minds (Rom. 12:2).
Not think more
highly of ourselves than we ought (Rom. 12:3).
Exercise our gifts
according to the grace given to us (Rom. 12:6).
Love others without
hypocrisy (Rom. 12:9).
Abhor what is evil
and cling to what is good (Rom. 12:9).
Be devoted to one
another in brotherly love, giving preference to one another in honor (Rom.
12:10).
Not lag behind in
diligence (Rom. 12:11).
Be fervent in
spirit as we serve the Lord (Rom. 12:11).
Rejoice in hope
(Rom. 12:12).
Persevere in
tribulation (Rom. 12:12).
Be devoted to
prayer (Rom. 12:12).
Contribute to the
needs of the saints (Rom. 12:13).
Practice
hospitality (Rom. 12:13).
Bless those who
persecute us and not curse them (Rom. 12:14).
Rejoice with those
who rejoice and weep with those who weep (Rom. 12:15).
Not be haughty of
mind but associate with the lowly (Rom. 12:16).
Not be wise in our
own estimation (Rom. 12:16).
Never pay back evil
for evil to anyone (Rom. 12:17).
Respect what is
right in the sight of all men (Rom. 12:17).
Be at peace with
all men as far as possible (Rom. 12:18).
Never take our own
revenge (Rom. 12:19).
Feed our enemy if
he is hungry and give him a drink if he is thirsty (Rom. 12:20).
Not be overcome
with evil, but overcome evil with good (Rom. 12:21).
Be subject to the
governing authorities (Rom. 13:1).
Owe nothing to
anyone except to love one another (Rom. 13:8).
Lay aside the deeds
of darkness and put on the armor of light (Rom. 13:12).
Behave properly as
in the day, not in carousing and drunkenness, sexual promiscuity and
sensuality, strife or jealousy, but put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no
provision for the flesh in regard to its lusts (Rom. 13:13-14).
Accept those who
are weak in faith (Rom. 14:1).
Not judge our
brother or regard him with contempt (Rom. 14:10).
Not put an obstacle
or stumbling block in a brother’s way (Rom. 14:13).
Pursue the things
which make for peace and the building up of one another (Rom. 14:19).
Bear the weakness
of those without strength if we are strong, not just pleasing ourselves (Rom.
15:1).
Accept one another,
just as Christ accepted us (Rom. 15:7).
Keep our eyes on
those who cause dissensions and hindrances contrary to biblical truth, and turn
away from them (Rom. 16:17).
Now, may I ask, is there such a thing
as human responsibility for Christians? What should we say to the person who
says he’s leaving his sanctification completely in the hands of God, lest he
rob God of glory and be guilty of adding his own works to his salvation?
Spiritual
War
Every one of the commandments and
instructions listed above not only prove the concept of human responsibility
but also imply that all of us are faced with alternate choices. We can choose
to do or not do what Jesus said. From within our regenerated spirits, the Holy
Spirit leads us to obey, while other forces, namely the world, the flesh, and
the devil, tempt us to disobey. Thus we find that we’re caught in a war.
Two points about this war need to be
made. First, false Christians sometimes mistakenly suppose they are
experiencing this spiritual war. In reality, however, they are experiencing a
somewhat similar war between their conscience and their sinful nature. As Paul
wrote, even unsaved people possess a conscience that alternately accuses or
defends them (see Rom. 2:15). Because they have violated it so many times,
however, their conscience is defiled (see Tit. 1:15), and its voice grows more
dim as they continue to ignore its nagging. The true Christian, on the other
hand, has a conscience that has been fully awakened, that speaks to him
constantly and is not easy to ignore. The Spirit of God is leading all the true
children of God (see Rom. 8:14).
The second point is that professing
Christians often use the fact of the spiritual war as an excuse to sin. “We’re
in a war,” they quip, “and so it’s inevitable that we’re going to lose a lot of
battles.” This excuse is in the same category as, “No one is perfect, you know!
(So I’ll be pathetic.)”
God is the one who has sovereignly
permitted this spiritual war to exist, and His purpose in allowing it is not that His children would yield to sin. Rather, His
purpose is that we would prove ourselves to be overcomers to His glory.
Consider what Paul said about the war between the flesh and the Spirit in
Galatians 5:
But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you
will not carry out the desire of the flesh. For the flesh sets its desire
against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; for these are in
opposition to one another, so that you may not do the things that you please.
But if you are led by the Spirit, you are not under the Law. Now the deeds of
the flesh are evident, which are: immorality, impurity, sensuality, idolatry,
sorcery, enmities, strife, jealousy, outbursts of anger, disputes, dissensions,
factions, envying, drunkenness, carousing, and things like these, of which I
forewarn you just as I have forewarned you that those who practice such things
shall not inherit the kingdom of God. But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy,
peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control;
against such things there is no law. Now those who belong to Christ Jesus have
crucified the flesh with its passions and desires (Gal. 5:16-24).
Christians are obviously two-natured,
possessing a sinful nature that opposes the indwelling Holy Spirit. But is this
an excuse to yield to sin? Absolutely not. Paul warns that those who practice
the sins of the flesh will not inherit God’s kingdom. In fact, no true
Christian habitually yields to the flesh, because, as Paul said, “Those who
belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires”
(5:24). This occurred at the initial point of salvation, when heart faith was
manifested in repentance and submission to Christ’s lordship. At that point,
metaphorically speaking, we nailed the old sinful man to a cross. And there he
must stay. He is still very much alive and may cry out to have his way, but by
the power of the Spirit, his calls go unheeded.
In the
Flesh or in the Spirit?
In the eighth chapter of Romans, Paul
contrasts the unsaved person, whom he describes as being “in the flesh,” with
the regenerate person, whom he describes as being “in the Spirit.” This is very
important for us to understand. Read Paul’s words carefully as we consider this
passage of Scripture:
For what the Law could not do, weak as
it was through the flesh, God did: sending His own Son in the likeness of
sinful flesh and as an offering for sin, He condemned sin in the flesh, in
order that the requirement of the Law might be fulfilled in us, who do not walk
according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit (Rom. 8:3-4).
Notice that already Paul has described
believers as those who “do not walk [live their lives] according to the flesh,
but according to the Spirit.”
For those who are according to the
flesh [the unsaved] set their minds on the things of the flesh, but those who
are according to the Spirit [the saved], the things of the Spirit. For the mind
set on the flesh [what the unsaved do] is death, but the mind set on the Spirit
[what the saved do] is life and peace, because the mind set on the flesh [what
the unsaved do] is hostile toward God; for it does not subject itself to the
law of God, for it is not even able to do so; and those who are in the flesh
cannot please God. However, you [the believers] are not in the flesh but in the
Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God dwells in you. But if anyone does not
have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him (Rom. 8:5-9, emphasis added).
Clearly, Paul is not contrasting two
kinds of Christians, those who set their minds on the flesh and those who set
their minds on the Spirit. He is contrasting those who are indwelt by the
Spirit and who thus set their minds on the Spirit, with those who are not
indwelt by the Spirit and whose minds are set on the flesh—Christians and
non-Christians.
Christians can be said to have Christ
in them, by the indwelling Spirit, even though they still possess the sinful
nature of the flesh:
And if Christ is in you, though the
body is dead because of sin, yet the spirit is alive because of righteousness.
But if the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He who
raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies
through His Spirit who indwells you (Rom. 8:10-11).
Our body, what Paul calls the “outer
man” in 2 Corinthians 4:16, is “dead” or “decaying” (2 Cor. 4:16) because of
sin. But our spirit, the “inner man” (2 Cor. 4:16) is now alive because we’ve
been made righteous. It is being renewed every day (see 2 Cor. 4:16). Yet we
can look forward to the day when the Spirit within us will give life to our
“mortal bodies,” and our bodies will also be made new. Obviously, God intends
that the indwelling Spirit dominate the flesh. It is destined to dominate to
the point of changing our bodies and eradicating the sinful nature completely.
Finally, Paul warns the believers to
whom he was writing about yielding to the flesh. By the power of the Spirit
within them, they can put “to death the deeds of the body.” This they must do:
So then, brethren, we are under
obligation, not to the flesh, to live according to the flesh—for if you are
living according to the flesh, you must die; but if by the Spirit you are
putting to death the deeds of the body, you will live. For all who are being
led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God (Rom. 8:12-14).
Do you fit the description of the one
Paul said will not die, but live—the one who is “by the Spirit...putting to
death the deeds of the body”? Then you are an authentic Christian. Clearly Paul
believed that true Christians act differently than non-Christians. As he said,
it is those who are being led by the Spirit who are God’s true sons (see Rom.
8:14).
The Answer
to an Objection
Some may object: “But didn’t Paul
confess that he himself practiced the very evil he hated, referring to himself
as a ‘wretched man’?”
Yes, he did. In fact, Paul said those
words in the seventh chapter of Romans, just prior to what we’ve just been
considering in the eighth chapter of Romans. Christians have debated if Paul
was speaking of his experience before or after his conversion. Antinomians, in
particular, love to set Paul’s word in Romans 7 as the standard for normal
Christian experience.
However, once we read Romans 7 in
context with the two adjacent chapters, all of Paul’s other writings, and the
rest of the New Testament, there can be only one reasonable interpretation.
Paul could only have been speaking of his experience before being indwelt by
the Spirit. Otherwise, in chapter 7 he contradicted what he himself wrote about
normal Christian experience in chapters 6 and 8. As has been appropriately
asked, “If the man in chapter 7 is a born-again believer, who is the man in
chapters 6 and 8?” They are obviously two vastly different people.
First, we note that the main theme of
chapter 6 is the incompatibility of sin with the new creation. Paul began with
the rhetorical question, “Are we to continue in sin that grace might increase?”
(6:1). His reply? “May it never be!” He then wrote of the impossibility of a
believer being in such a condition: “How shall we who died to sin still live in
it?” (6:2).
In the verses that follow, Paul made
it ever so clear that all believers have been united with Jesus in His death
and resurrection that they might “walk in newness of life” (6:4) now that they
are no longer “slaves of sin” (6:6, 17, 20). Rather, they are now “freed from
sin” (6:7, 18, 22), are “slaves of righteousness” (6:18), and “enslaved to God”
(6:22), having become “obedient from the heart to that form of teaching to
which [they] were committed” (6:17). Sin is no longer “master” over them, and
so they should not let it “reign” in their bodies, obeying its desires (6:12).
Rather, they should present their members as “slaves to righteousness,
resulting in sanctification” (6:19).
How does this chapter 6 Christian
compare to the man in chapter 7, whom Paul describes as “of flesh, sold into
bondage to sin” (7:14), who practices the very evil he does not want to do,
doing what he hates (7:15, 19), a virtual “prisoner of the law of sin” (7:23),
and a “wretched man” (7:24)? Is the man of chapter 6, set free from sin, the
same wretched man of chapter 7 who is a prisoner of sin? Is the man of chapter
6, whose old self was crucified with Christ that his “body of sin might be done
away with” (6:6) the same man of chapter 7 who longs for someone to set him “free
from the body of this death” (7:24)? This certainly doesn’t seem likely, does
it?
Moreover, the first 14 verses of
chapter 8, which we’ve already considered, raise even more questions if the
chapter 7 man is a Christian. In chapter 8, Paul described the true Christian
as one who does “not walk according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit”
(8:4), whose mind is set on the Spirit, and not the flesh, unlike non-Christian
minds (8:5-6). The true Christian is one who is not “in the flesh” but “in the
Spirit” because the Spirit dwells in him (8:9). Paul even warned those who are
living according to the flesh that they must die, and promises that those who,
“by the Spirit...are putting to death the deeds of the body” (8:13) that they
will live. If Paul was speaking of his own present experience in chapter 7,
we’d be tempted to tell him to read his own letter so he could find out how to
be saved and set free from sin! And in light of all his many other exhortations
to holiness directed to others, we’d have to classify him as a hypocrite who
preached “Do as I say, not as I do.”
Paul in
Context
If Paul was presently practicing the very evil that he hated, then by his own
description of unbelievers in this and other letters, he was not saved (see
Rom. 2:8-9; 1 Cor. 6:9-11; Gal. 5:19-21; Eph. 5:5-6). According to what John
also wrote, Paul would not be saved: “The one who practices sin is of the
devil....No one who is born of God practices sin....anyone who does not
practice righteousness is not of God...” (1 Jn. 3:8-10).
If Paul was speaking in chapter 7 of
his present condition as a wretched prisoner of sin, practicing evil, it
greatly surprises those of us who have read what he said about himself in other
places. Although he admitted that he had not reached perfection (see Phil.
3:12), he wrote to the Corinthians that he was “conscious of nothing against
[himself]” (1 Cor. 4:4), and further stated,
For our proud confidence is this, the
testimony of our conscience, that in holiness and godly sincerity, not in
fleshly wisdom but in the grace of God, we have conducted ourselves in the
world, and especially toward you (2 Cor. 1:12).
To the Thessalonian Christians, he
wrote:
You are witnesses, and so is God, how
devoutly and uprightly and blamelessly we behaved toward you believers (1 Thes.
2:10).
He testified to Timothy that he served
God with a clear conscience (see 2 Tim. 1:3). One gets the impression as he
reads Paul’s story and his letters that Paul was a very, very Christ-like man. His devotion is unparalleled to anyone else in the New Testament other than
Jesus. How then can we imagine him practicing evil?
The only reasonable conclusion we can
draw from all this evidence is that Paul was speaking in Romans 7 of his
experience prior to his salvation.
“But didn’t Paul write chapter 7 in
the present tense? Does that not prove he was writing about his present
condition?” some ask.
No, the tense Paul used does not prove
anything. We often use the present tense when telling of a past experience. I
might tell a fishing story that happened ten years ago by saying, “So, here I
am in my boat, at my favorite spot on the lake. Suddenly I feel a little tug on
my line—I’m not sure if it’s a fish or a snag. Then it strikes! I start reeling
in the biggest fish I’ve ever caught! Right as I bring it up to the boat, the
line snaps, and off swims a monster-sized bass. Oh, wretched man that I am! Who
will deliver me from this crazy sport?”
“But didn’t Paul say in Romans 7 that
he didn’t want to do wrong, but wanted to do right? Didn’t he even say, “I
joyfully concur with the law of God in the inner man” (7:22)? How could he say
those things as an unsaved man? Aren’t unsaved people wicked to the core and
totally depraved?”
You must remember that Paul was a very
zealous Jewish Pharisee before his salvation. He, unlike the average unsaved
person, was doing everything he could to obey God’s laws, to the point of even
persecuting the church! But he found that no matter how hard he tried, he
couldn’t measure up to God’s standards. He was a slave to sin. He eventually
realized that he couldn’t be holy without the Holy Spirit’s supernatural help.
Truly, there is no more wretched person than the one who is trying to live by
God’s standards but who is not born again!
Romans 7
“Christians”
It is to be greatly regretted, in
spite of all that Jesus, John, James, Peter, Jude and Paul said that
contradicts the idea that the Romans 7 man is born again, that so many today
think he is. The reason is not because of the scriptural evidence for such a
view, but because of the multitudes of professing Christians who identify with
the Romans 7 man, practicing what they hate, in bondage to sin. They interpret
the Scripture from their experience with a logic that says, “I identify with
the Romans 7 man, and I’m a Christian, so the Romans 7 man must be a
Christian.”
This wrong interpretation
of Romans 7 bolsters the shaky and spurious faith of many, who have not yet
experienced the freedom from sin’s power that Paul promised in Romans 6 and 8
and personally enjoyed throughout his Christian life. This is a great tragedy
in light of the wonderful grace of God that is freely available to all through
Jesus Christ, if people will only come to Him on His terms, with a living,
submissive faith.
Footnotes
table
of contents | previous chapter | next
chapter | top of page | buy
this book | home
We’re so thankful that we can provide the teaching you’ve just read. Although it was free for you, it wasn’t actually free...someone else paid for it. If you’ve been blessed, can you help us bless others? We’re equipping pastors in many developing nations by freely giving them books in their own languages. Those books contain many of the same articles available on our website, but most often, the pastors we help don’t have affordable internet access. Your donation, large or small, can make a difference. Just click the PayPal button below. Thank you!
|