Gospel of God
Paul presents his Gospel in Romans from humanity's plight due to sin to the resurrection of the dead and the New Creation.
The
Apostle Paul presents his most detailed explanation of the “Good News of God”
in his Letter to the Romans. Paul was dealing with conflicts between
Gentile and Jewish believers in the Assembly and preparing the ground for taking
the Gospel to the western regions of the Roman Empire. In the process, he addressed
related topics, including death, redemption, the Law, resurrection, and the New
Creation.
The Apostle to the Gentiles begins
by describing the plight of humanity that resulted from humanity’s rebellion against
God’s order, and then he presents the solution provided through the Death and
Resurrection of Jesus.
[Photo by Nghia Le on Unsplash] |
All men and women are in the same dilemma. Disobedience has alienated them from God and condemned every member of the human race to weakness, decay, and death. No one is exempt, neither Jew nor Greek, not even the most righteous saint in the history of Israel.
Even the holy law given by God at
Mount Sinai proved itself unable to reverse this horrific reality. No one could
ever be acquitted before God “from the works of the Law.”
Paul identifies himself as “Paul,
a called apostle, separated for the Gospel of God, which he promised beforehand
through his prophets.” In his apostolic role, he proclaims the Good News about
the one who was “marked out as Son of God by power, according to a spirit of
holiness, from a resurrection from among dead ones” - (Romans 1:1-4).
The Gospel is the “power of
God for salvation to everyone who believes; to the Jew first, and also to the
Greek.” Jews and Gentiles acquire right-standing before God on the same
basis, namely, faith, but a particular kind of faith. It is not the act of faith that saves, but the target and content of that faith.
God has “revealed a righteousness from faith for faith” in and through Jesus Christ, but the proclamation of His Good News also reveals His “wrath against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men.”
Sinners resist what truth they
already possess from the knowledge they glean from the created order (“The
invisible things of him since the creation of the world are clearly seen, being
perceived through the things that are made”). Having rejected the God who
created all things, they exchange the worship of the Creator for that of the “likeness
of an image of corruptible man, and of birds, and four-footed beasts, and
creeping things” – namely, idolatrous worship.
Therefore, God has “delivered
them up to the lusts of their hearts.” The presence of the very sins that
humanity desires demonstrates that men are under “wrath” even before the
final judgment. Put
another way, the “wrath” of God includes His handing men over to engage
in the sins for which they lust. The picture in Chapter 1 of idolatry run amok
has primarily Gentiles in view.
NO EXCUSE
What about Jews? Are they any
better off than the idolatrous Gentiles? Paul answers in the negative - “No,
certainly not, for we before laid to the charge both of Jews and Greeks, that
they are all under sin.”
He cites several passages from
the Hebrew Bible proving that all men have sinned. Everyone is in the same sinking
ship, including the most rigorously Torah-observant Jews. “There is none
righteous, no, not one… No man does good. No, not, so much as one.”
What about the Law? Does not its
possession give Israel an advantage over unenlightened Gentiles? Yes and no. The
Jews possess it, and therefore, they understand what God requires. However, the
Law speaks to those who are “within the Law,” that is, Israel:
- “So that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may be brought under penal sentence of God, because from the works of the law will no flesh be set right in his sight. For through law is the awareness of sin” - (Romans 3:19).
Paul writes, “For
through law is the awareness of sin.” The English term “awareness”
translates the Greek noun ‘epignôsis’ (επιγνωσις), a compound of the
preposition ‘epi’ (επι) and the noun ‘gnosis’ or “knowledge” (γνωσις).
Compounded with ‘epi’, it acquires a fuller sense such as “full
knowledge,” “understanding,” and “comprehension.”
Because the Jews are taught the
Law of Moses, they comprehend more fully what God requires, and what will
result from violating His statutes, putting especially devout Jews in double
jeopardy since they are truly without excuse. They are at even
greater risk of enduring God’s “wrath” than unenlightened Gentiles who
do not live “within the Law.”
In contrast to the Law, the Gospel provides a solution for Jews and Gentiles, “The righteousness of God through the faith of Jesus Christ for all who believe, for there is no distinction; all have sinned and lack the glory of God.”
Both Jews and Gentiles are set
right before God “through the redemption in Christ Jesus.” Thus, a man
is put into a right relationship with God from faith, and that is
“apart from the works of the Torah.” Thus, God demonstrates His love for
us:
- “While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. Much more then, being now set right through his blood, we will be saved from the wrath through him. For if, while we were enemies, we were reconciled to God through the death of his Son, much more, being reconciled, we will be saved by his life.”
When Paul states that we are saved
“through his life,” he means the resurrection life of the Son of
God. Sin is not reckoned to us if we believe that God “raised Jesus our Lord
from among the dead.” He was delivered to a violent death for our
trespasses, but he was “raised for our justification.”
This is the plight of humanity -
“Through one man sin entered into the world, and death through sin; thus,
death passed to all men since all have sinned.”
SPIRIT & RESURRECTION
The penalty for sin is death. In
the passage from Chapter 5, Paul refers to Adam and his disobedience in the
Garden of Eden. That first sin doomed all humanity to death and enslavement
under sin, the just punishment for disobedience. Not that all die for Adam’s
sin, for all men sin. Therefore, all men rightly deserve death. Fortunately, God
did not leave humanity without hope:
- “If by the trespass of the one man, the many died, much more did the grace of God, and the gift by the grace of the one man, Jesus Christ, abound unto the many… For if, by the trespass of the one, death reigned through the one, much more shall they that receive the abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness reign in life through the one, Jesus Christ.”
Believers have been baptized
into Christ’s death so that, “Just as Christ was raised from the dead, so we
also might walk in newness of life. For if we have become united with him in
the likeness of his death, we shall be also in the likeness of his
resurrection… if we died with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with
him; knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dies no more; death no
more has dominion over him. For the death that he died, he died unto sin once:
but the life that he lives, he lives unto God.”
The counterpart to death
is resurrection - Life received by the bodily resurrection
from the dead. That knowledge should reorient our entire lives, including our
relationship to the Law. We also must “become dead to the law by the body of
Christ, that we should be married to another, even to him who is raised
from the dead.”
Despite being acquitted by God,
believers are still subject to death. However, “If the Spirit of him that
raised up Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he that raised up Jesus from
the dead will give life also to your mortal bodies through his Spirit.”
The Gift of the Spirit is the foretaste
and guarantee of our future resurrection when Jesus returns. The Spirit dwells in mortal
believers and attests that we are the “children of God,” and therefore,
“coheirs with Christ.” The creation itself is in “earnest expectation”
as it awaits the day when the “sons of God will be revealed.” All
creation will be delivered from this “bondage of corruption into the liberty
of the glory of the children of God…at our adoption, that is, the
redemption of our body” - (Romans 8:10-23).
Thus, Paul links the bodily
resurrection and the New Creation. The “redemption of our bodies”
refers to our future resurrection when Jesus “arrives.” Moreover, if the
creation itself is anticipating that event, then its arrival can only mean the commencement
of the New Creation. Who, then, “shall separate us from the love of Christ?”
Certainly not death!
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SEE ALSO:
- Just Judgment - (The arrival of Jesus will mean vindication and rest for the righteous, but everlasting loss for the wicked - 2 Thessalonians 1:5-10)
- Good News for all men - (The Good News announced by Jesus of Nazareth offers salvation and life to men and women of every nation and people)
- Day of Christ - (Jesus will arrive on the Day of the Lord when the dead are raised, the wicked are judged, and death will cease forevermore)
- L'Évangile de Dieu - (Paul présente son Évangile dans Romains de la détresse de l'humanité due au péché à la résurrection des morts et à la Nouvelle Création)
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