A Recap of Romans: The Foundation of Our Faith
This podcast episode delves into the profound significance of the Gospel as articulated in the Book of Romans, emphasizing that it is the very foundation of our faith and salvation. Pastor Josh Massaro articulates the pivotal message that believers must not be ashamed of the Gospel, for it embodies the power of God unto salvation for all who believe. Throughout the discourse, he provides a comprehensive recap of Romans chapters one through eight, elucidating the themes of sin, righteousness, and the transformative power of faith in Jesus Christ. Furthermore, he underscores the imperative of proclaiming this message boldly, regardless of societal opposition or personal discomfort. Ultimately, this episode serves as a clarion call to embrace our responsibility as Christians to share the Gospel with fervor and compassion, reflecting the love of Christ towards a world in need.
Takeaways:
- Pastor Josh Massaro emphasizes the significance of the Gospel of Christ, asserting that it is the foundation upon which our faith rests and the source of our salvation.
- The importance of recalling and reflecting on the teachings from Romans chapters one through eight is highlighted, as they provide essential context for understanding God's message.
- The Apostle Paul addresses the challenge of shame that many Christians face regarding their faith, encouraging believers to boldly proclaim the Gospel without fear or hesitation.
- Paul expresses a deep compassion for the lost, illustrating the need for believers to cultivate a similar heart for those who have yet to accept Jesus Christ as their Savior.
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This podcast is produced by Ralph Estep, Jr., host of Financially Confident Christian, a daily podcast on Christian Finance you can find it at https://www.financiallyconfidentchristian.com
00:00 - Untitled
00:23 - Recap Sunday Introduction
01:00 - Introduction to the Book of Romans
12:18 - Understanding Salvation and New Life in Christ
16:41 - Transition to Romans 9: Paul's Heart for Israel
21:01 - The Heart of Evangelism: Paul's Perspective on the Lost
29:33 - The Heart of Paul for Israel
36:55 - The Purpose of God's Grace
44:51 - The Transformative Power of Jesus
Hello and welcome to the Middletown Baptist Church Podcast, where we are proclaiming the truth to the world.
Speaker AMy name is Pastor Josh and I want to thank you for listening to this podcast.
Speaker AI hope that this podcast can be a blessing to you and strengthen you in the word of God.
Speaker ANow come along, let's look into the Bible and see what God has for us here today.
Speaker AIf you're sitting in here with us today, we're going to have somewhat of a recap Sunday.
Speaker AMany of you know that before Christmas we were studying the Book of Romans and we have gone through Romans 1 through 8.
Speaker AThat's a lot of ground that we have covered so far.
Speaker AIf you have not been with us, that's okay.
Speaker AEvery message is going to be individually unique to itself and have lessons for us to learn and application in our lives.
Speaker ABut I do know that sometimes it's tempting and possible, sometimes probable, that we will forget things after a while.
Speaker AAnd I know for me, even I forget what I did last week, no less, what I was doing before Christmas.
Speaker AAnd so I want to recap Romans 1:8 here this morning.
Speaker AAnd you say Romans 8.
Speaker AWe could talk about Romans 8 all day.
Speaker AWe're going to talk through Romans 1:8 today.
Speaker AWell, we're going to go quickly, but it's all going to lead up to Romans 9, because in Romans 9 we do have a very interesting passage of scripture that many people debate about.
Speaker AAnd I think it's good to understand context as we lead up to that passage that we're going to be talking about here this morning.
Speaker ASo by way of reminder, the book of Romans obviously is inspired by God.
Speaker AWe know all scripture is given by inspiration of God.
Speaker AAnd so we know that this is from God to us.
Speaker ABut on a more personal level, the Apostle Paul wrote this letter to the church in Rome, the Christians in Rome, teaching them various things about what they should believe, teaching them why they need Jesus, why they need salvation.
Speaker AAnd really, we see in Romans chapter one, you're going to be turning a lot with me here this morning.
Speaker ARomans, chapter one, verse 16, he tells us, for I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ.
Speaker AAnd so what we can see here is he starts his message to the church with the message of the Gospel.
Speaker AAnd that's really where it all starts.
Speaker AAll the way back In Matthew, chapter 16, Jesus asked a question to his disciples.
Speaker AHe says, whom do men say that I am?
Speaker AAnd if you remember, what did they say?
Speaker AThey say, well, some people think you're Jeremiah.
Speaker ASome people think you're Isaiah.
Speaker ASome people think that you're John the Baptist or one of the prophets.
Speaker AAnd then Jesus said, okay, that's what people say about me, but whom do you say that I am?
Speaker AAnd Peter answers for them and says, well, you're the Christ.
Speaker AYou're the Messiah.
Speaker AYou're the Son of the living God.
Speaker AThat's the message of the gospel.
Speaker AThat Jesus is God.
Speaker AThat he came to this earth, that he lived that perfect life, that he died on the cross for our sins, and that he conquered death through the resurrection.
Speaker AAnd so Jesus says, peter, upon that rock, upon that proclamation, I'm going to build my church.
Speaker AAnd so everything that we do in our lives is based on the truth of who Jesus is and what he has done for us.
Speaker AWe could say it this way.
Speaker AThe person and work of Jesus Christ, that is the foundation of the church, that is the cornerstone to our Christian walk.
Speaker AEverything that we do should be focused in the Gospel.
Speaker AAnd so in verse number 16 of chapter one in the book of Romans, Paul reminds us that we should not be ashamed of the Gospel of Christ.
Speaker AHow many Christians today struggle with that shame of being a believer?
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause culture tells us that it's wrong.
Speaker ACulture tells us that living for Christ, believing in Jesus, believing in his work, believing that he's God, believing that he can change lives, believing that he can give us new life, that's wrong.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AThat's old, that's, that's antiquated.
Speaker AThat's not something for us today.
Speaker AAnd so what we see today in our world is that there are some people that claim to be Christians, but they're ashamed of the gospel.
Speaker AAnd the way that we know that people are ashamed of the gospel is because we're ashamed to proclaim the gospel.
Speaker AAnd Paul says, no, we should proclaim the gospel.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker AFor it is the power of God unto salvation to everyone that believeth.
Speaker AThe Bible says that the gospel has power.
Speaker AWhat's the power?
Speaker AWell, it's the power of God to save.
Speaker AWhy do we need a savior?
Speaker AWell, we're going to talk more about that later on in the book of Romans.
Speaker ABut here in chapter one, Paul reminded us that we can't be ashamed of the gospel.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause it's the power of God unto salvation to everyone that believe it.
Speaker ATo the Jew first, we know that the word of God came to the Jews first.
Speaker ABut then it says also to the Greek to all the Bible says that anyone who comes and believes in Jesus Christ will be saved.
Speaker AIt's not a matter of your good works.
Speaker AIt's not about a matter of your Lineage, where you were born, how you were born, how much money you have, how good you look.
Speaker AThe Bible says it's by faith in Jesus Christ that saves us.
Speaker AThat's what verse 17 is all about.
Speaker AFor therein is righteousness of God.
Speaker ASome people are trying to find righteousness in all of the wrong places.
Speaker APeople are trying to find righteousness in being a good person or having good karma or doing enough to maybe justify themselves.
Speaker ABut the Bible says that none of that can justify us.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause the righteousness of God is revealed.
Speaker AWhat?
Speaker AFrom faith to faith as it is written.
Speaker AThe just shall live by faith.
Speaker AThe only way that we can say that we're just.
Speaker AThe only way that we can say that God has justified us is by saying that I have faith in him and through Jesus Christ.
Speaker AJohn 14:6.
Speaker AHe is the way, the truth, and the life.
Speaker AAnd so it starts with the gospel.
Speaker AIt starts with the truth.
Speaker APaul says, you need to know what the gospel is.
Speaker AThere's so many people today preaching different gospels.
Speaker ASay, what is that?
Speaker AWell, the word gospel literally means good news.
Speaker AThere's a lot of people trying to tell you that there's good news in all these different places.
Speaker AAnd you could turn on your tv, you can turn on your phone, you can turn on whatever electronic device, and you could find someone telling you what to believe.
Speaker ABible says that there's a lot of gospels out there.
Speaker AAnd actually in 2 Corinthians, chapter 11, verse 4, it warns us to be aware of false gospels.
Speaker ANot every gospel that's preached to us is the gospel of the truth of Jesus Christ.
Speaker AAnd so what we have to do is we have to be very clear about what the gospel is.
Speaker AThe good news is not, hey, just work really, really hard, and you can make it be.
Speaker ABe a good person, be better than your neighbor.
Speaker AThese are not things that are found in scripture.
Speaker AActually, what's found in scripture is that there is none good.
Speaker ANo, not one.
Speaker AWe're going to read that in Romans.
Speaker AFor all have sinned and come short of the glory of God.
Speaker AAnd so the reality is, is that all of us have a problem, and that problem is sin.
Speaker AWell, you might say, well, well, Pastor Josh, you don't know me.
Speaker AI'm better than my neighbor.
Speaker AI'm better than my coworker.
Speaker AI try my best.
Speaker AThe Bible never says that.
Speaker AThe basis on which he judges us is on how much we're trying.
Speaker ABecause there's a lot of people that are trying hard in this world.
Speaker AThere's a lot of people that are genuinely doing their best.
Speaker ABut The Bible says that even our best does not save us.
Speaker AThe Bible says clearly that it is only by faith in Jesus Christ and His work on the cross for.
Speaker AFor us.
Speaker ASo it says, the just shall live by what?
Speaker ABy faith?
Speaker AFaith is believing, faith is trusting.
Speaker ANow the works come after faith.
Speaker AYes, God does call us to serve him, but it doesn't come from a place of our own strength.
Speaker AIt comes from the strength and his righteousness that he gives us.
Speaker ASo that's Romans chapter one.
Speaker AAnd then we saw that God is righteously judging those that are in sin.
Speaker AGod has the right to judge those.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause He.
Speaker AHe created us, number one.
Speaker AAnd the Bible says here in Romans chapter one and two, that some people left their original state that God had planned for them, and they had basically worshiped the creation instead of the Creator.
Speaker AThat's what happens when we essentially fall into a life of sin and flesh is that we begin to worship the creation of God instead of the one who created it.
Speaker AThat is, that is he, that is our Savior.
Speaker AAnd so Romans chapter two tells us that God is a righteous judge.
Speaker AHe's.
Speaker AHe's willing to save us.
Speaker AHe's open to saving us, but he has every right to judge us in our sin.
Speaker AAnd then Romans 3 tells us why he judges us.
Speaker ARomans 3:23.
Speaker AFor all have sinned and come short of the glory of God.
Speaker AAll have sinned and come short of the glory of God.
Speaker AIf you just go back a few verses, Romans 3:10.
Speaker AAs it is written, there is none righteous.
Speaker ANo, not one.
Speaker ASo we, if we left it at that, that would be hopeless.
Speaker AAnd some people blame other people for their sin.
Speaker AYou know, sometimes in my life I've done that.
Speaker AI. I've made a mistake.
Speaker AAnd I said, you know what?
Speaker AThe reason why I did this is because of somebody else.
Speaker AThe reason why I went this path is because someone led me astray.
Speaker AI know my kids all the time, like, they get in trouble.
Speaker AAnd immediately it's deflecting to say like, it's my brother, it's my sister, it's because of them.
Speaker AAnd what the Bible says here is that we have no one else to blame other than ourselves.
Speaker ARomans 5:12 says, as for one man, one man, sin entered the world, and that's Adam.
Speaker AWe know that Adam sinned.
Speaker AAnd because of Adam's sin, there is death by sin.
Speaker AAnd so death passed upon all men.
Speaker AFor that all have sinned.
Speaker AAnd so it's not a matter of saying it's Adam's fault.
Speaker AA lot of times I've heard people Say, man, if Adam just.
Speaker AIf he wouldn't have sinned, we'd all.
Speaker AWe'd be okay.
Speaker AThe truth is, is that all of us have sinned.
Speaker AAll of us are guilty.
Speaker ASo, so, so all of us have fallen into a place where we need a Savior.
Speaker AAnd that's really what we see.
Speaker ARomans, chapter six talking about.
Speaker AWe read it this morning.
Speaker AWhat shall we say then?
Speaker ASo, so Paul says, hey, you can be saved.
Speaker ABut then the idea would be that once we're saved, some people abuse grace.
Speaker ASome people say, well, you know what?
Speaker AIf I'm saved and God keeps forgiving me, why don't I just keep sinning?
Speaker AHe says, what shall we say then?
Speaker AShall we continue in sin, that grace may abound Meaning, should I just keep sinning even though God has saved me?
Speaker AAnd he says, no, God forbid, because when you're saved, how shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein?
Speaker AThe idea would be this.
Speaker AThe thought that Paul is explaining is this.
Speaker AIf we understand what God has saved us from and we understand that he's given us newness of life, why would we want to walk in sin anymore?
Speaker AKnow ye not, verse three, that so many of us were baptized into Jesus, were baptized into his death.
Speaker ATherefore we are buried with him by baptism into death.
Speaker AThat like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life.
Speaker AThe Bible says that when we are saved, we are given a new life.
Speaker AJohn 3 says that we are born again.
Speaker AYou must be born again.
Speaker AAnd remember, even Nicodemus in John 3 was so confused about that.
Speaker AHow can I be physically born again?
Speaker AWell, it's not a.
Speaker AA second physical birth, it's a second spiritual birth.
Speaker AAnd, and the Bible says that we're new, we're now babes in Christ, growing in his truth.
Speaker AAnd so verse four of chapter six says that we're walking in newness of life.
Speaker AWe're identified.
Speaker AWe missed the mark.
Speaker AIt actually was an ancient archery term that meant as, as I was aiming for the target, I didn't hit the target, I hit something else.
Speaker AWell, what's the mark?
Speaker AThe mark is God's righteousness, his holiness, that he lays out for us in his word.
Speaker ASo sin is missing the mark.
Speaker AIt's doing things against what God has intended for us in our life.
Speaker AAnd so he says here, what is the wage of that?
Speaker AWhat is the payment for that type of sin that we all have in our lives?
Speaker AWell, it's death.
Speaker AAnd it's not just physical Death, even though that's part of it, it's spiritual death.
Speaker AIt's separation from God, it's punishment.
Speaker ABut then we see a beautiful, beautiful verse at the very end of Romans 6:23.
Speaker AIt says this.
Speaker ABut the gift of God, the grace of God, is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Speaker AWhat he says here is our hope.
Speaker AThe world's hope, the hope of pain, the hope of suffering, the hope of sin, the hope of brokenness, the hope of evil.
Speaker AIs Jesus Christ to come to him, as the Bible says, to have eternal life.
Speaker AAnd we say, well, why does Jesus offer us that?
Speaker AHow could Jesus do that for us?
Speaker AThe Bible says back in Romans 5, verse 8, but God commended or demonstrated his love toward us in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us because of the love of Christ that He came to this earth and gave Himself for us.
Speaker AAnd so the book of Romans, really, through chapters one through six, seven and even eight, is a picture of the salvation that God gave to us.
Speaker AAnd so what is the gospel?
Speaker AIt's the message and the work and the person of Jesus Christ.
Speaker AWhat is salvation?
Speaker AHow do we find salvation?
Speaker ABy faith in Jesus Christ alone, by experiencing his gift of grace and his forgiveness.
Speaker AHow can we have that salvation?
Speaker AWe have it through faith.
Speaker AWhat do we have in salvation?
Speaker AWe have new life in Christ.
Speaker AWe have a new hope.
Speaker AWe have confidence in Him.
Speaker AWe're going to look at Romans 8 here this morning.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd we see in Romans 8, 1, it says, there is therefore now no condemnation.
Speaker AWhat's that word condemnation mean?
Speaker AIt means judgment.
Speaker AIt means punishment.
Speaker ASo if you're in Christ, if your identity is in Christ, the Bible says that there's no more condemnation.
Speaker AThere is no more condemnation to them who are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.
Speaker ASo the Bible says that, yes, in our sin, there is a ton of condemnation there.
Speaker AThere, there.
Speaker AThere's a ton of reasons why we should be afraid that.
Speaker ABut in Jesus Christ there is no more fear, there is no more condemnation.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause we have confidence in Him.
Speaker AThat word confidence is really two words in, in Latin that we understand it to be one word.
Speaker AIn the English language, con means with fide, means faith.
Speaker ASo to live with confidence means to live with faith.
Speaker ASo if we're Christians and we're living with faith, we're living with confidence, but confidence.
Speaker ANot in ourselves, not in our church, not in our.
Speaker AOur country necessarily, but in our Savior, Jesus Christ.
Speaker AAnd so the Bible throughout Romans 8 tells us that we have victory in Jesus and, and it goes on further to say that we have a heavenly Father who we can cry out in verse 15, Abba, Father, we have a personal God.
Speaker AWe have a God who cares for us.
Speaker AWe have a God who wants to know what's going on in our lives.
Speaker AAnd he already knows what's going on in our lives, but he wants us to share that with Him.
Speaker AHe wants us to walk with Him.
Speaker AHe wants us to be identified with him in every single way.
Speaker AAnd then we get to that end of Romans 8, which is, I believe, one of the strongest passages of speaking of the power of God and the confidence of a believer.
Speaker AVerse 28.
Speaker AAnd we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are called according to his purpose.
Speaker AThe Bible says that yes, God is working all things together for good.
Speaker AHe's working together for.
Speaker AFor our good.
Speaker ASometimes that's a confusing understanding with our lives, the way that it is within our circumstances.
Speaker ABut we have to know that God loves us.
Speaker AAnd he has a bigger picture.
Speaker AThen he says in verse 31, what shall we say to these things?
Speaker AIf God before us, who can be against us, he spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall we not with him also have freely give us all things?
Speaker AAnd so he's saying that God gave us His Son, so He will give us all the things that we need in our lives.
Speaker AAnd then verse 35. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?
Speaker AShall tribulation or distress or persecution or famine or nakedness or peril or sword, as it is written, for Thy sake we are killed all day long, we are counted as sheep for the slaughter.
Speaker ASo Paul says, can any of these things separate us from the love of God?
Speaker ACan any of these things separate us from his promises in our life?
Speaker ACan anything separate us from his salvation?
Speaker AVerse 37, Nay, no.
Speaker AIn all these things, we are more than conquerors.
Speaker AThe Greek word there is so amazing.
Speaker AIt actually literally means super conquerors.
Speaker AWe are super conquerors in Christ.
Speaker ASo what we know is this.
Speaker ANothing can separate us from the love of God.
Speaker ANothing can separate us from the promises of God.
Speaker ANothing can separate us from the salvation that he extends to us.
Speaker AAnd then it goes further.
Speaker AHe says, verse 38, For I am persuaded.
Speaker AHe basically says, I. I'm bought out.
Speaker AI'm.
Speaker AI'm buying into everything that he says.
Speaker AFor I'm persuaded that neither death nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor death, nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Speaker ASo what an amazing thing that is all of us.
Speaker AIf we are believers in Jesus Christ, if we have faith in him and him alone for our salvation, we can claim Romans 8 as the confidence that we have in our Savior.
Speaker AThat no matter where I'm at in my life, whether I'm stumbling where, whether I'm struggling, whether I'm feeling strong, whatever might be the case, that God is there with me and he's fighting for me.
Speaker AAnd then with Him, I'm more than a conqueror because I have his identity in my life.
Speaker AI have victory in Jesus.
Speaker AAnd so sometimes we're tempted to doubt.
Speaker ASometimes we're tempted to think that God might not keep his word.
Speaker ASometimes we're tempted to think that we're not enough.
Speaker AAnd the truth is, let me tell you a secret here this morning, I tell you guys this all the time.
Speaker AIt's not because I don't love you, because I would tell myself this.
Speaker AI'm not enough.
Speaker ANone of us are enough to save ourselves.
Speaker ABut in Jesus Christ, we are more than conquerors.
Speaker AAnd so we can find that love.
Speaker AWe can find that confidence.
Speaker AWe can find that strength.
Speaker AAnd so that's the end of Romans 8.
Speaker ANow, that's the quickest way that I could summarize Romans 1 through 8.
Speaker AOkay, I probably needed about five weeks for that.
Speaker ABut we went in about 10 minutes, 15 minutes.
Speaker AOkay, so we get to Romans 9, and Paul understands that some people might still have some questions.
Speaker AAnd that's one of the things I love about the Book of Romans.
Speaker APaul understands the readers, and he knows that they might have questions.
Speaker AAnd so he basically asked the questions for them.
Speaker AHe says, I know you might be thinking this.
Speaker AAnd so this is the answer to that.
Speaker AWe saw that in Romans 6.
Speaker AHe says, what should we continue in sin?
Speaker ABecause he understood that people, if they truly understand, understood grace, that they wouldn't abuse grace.
Speaker ABut some people didn't completely understand grace.
Speaker ASo they said, well, if God just loves me, no matter what, I can just keep sinning.
Speaker AHe says, no, God forbid.
Speaker ASo he answered that question in their minds.
Speaker ASo the next possible question that the readers of the Book of Romans would have had was this.
Speaker AYou say that you've been faithful.
Speaker AYou.
Speaker AYou say if you go back to Romans 8, he says those he did for no, all of those Old Testament saints of the past, God was faithful to.
Speaker AGod was faithful to Israel.
Speaker AThen why do many people that are considered to be the Jewish leaders of the day reject the Messiah that came for their sins.
Speaker ABecause that would have been the understanding, if you remember, Paul was persecuted there in the Book of Acts.
Speaker APaul was persecuted throughout the whole New Testament.
Speaker AAnd a lot of people think in their minds that it was just the Romans that were persecuting Paul.
Speaker AThough Paul did face persecution from the Romans, Paul also faced a ton of persecution.
Speaker AMost of his persecution from the religious leaders that he was a part of before the Jewish religious leaders.
Speaker AThey did not accept the Messiah for the most part.
Speaker AMany of the religious people there in Jerusalem did not.
Speaker AAnd around the world for that matter, did not trust in Jesus.
Speaker ASo the question that some of these people that were very familiar with the Jewish religion at that time would have said, well, I thought you said that God has always been faithful to his people and, and that his people will be faithful to Him.
Speaker ASo, so what's the problem?
Speaker AWhat was, was basically what we see here, that God's word failed to those people.
Speaker AAnd Paul's going to address that.
Speaker AAnd Paul shares his heart for the salvation of his people, the Jewish people, the Israelite people.
Speaker AAnd so at this point in time, many of Paul's enemies were his own people.
Speaker AAnd the persecution came from the Jewish religious, religious people of the day.
Speaker AAnd, and I think that the first few verses Here, Romans chapter 9, tell us a great example of how we should desire to grow in our compassion for the lost and grow in our compassion for those that are our enemies.
Speaker AAnd then there's more to be said here.
Speaker AAnd so really, Romans 9, 10 and 11.
Speaker AIs Paul addressing the question of why did the people of Israel who everything was entrusted to, why did they turn their backs?
Speaker AWhy did, did they turn away?
Speaker AAnd Paul addresses that here in Romans 9, 10 and 11.
Speaker AAnd so I want you to see here in Romans 9, verse 1, it says this, I say the truth in Christ.
Speaker AI lie not.
Speaker AMy conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy Ghost.
Speaker ASo what's Paul saying?
Speaker AHe says, what I'm about to tell you is serious.
Speaker AWhat I'm about to tell you is going to be hard for you to believe.
Speaker AWhat I'm about to tell you is I'm standing before the Lord saying that I'm telling you the truth.
Speaker AThis is what I believe and this is what I feel, and this is what I live in.
Speaker AVerse two, that I have great heaviness and continual sorrow in my heart.
Speaker ASo Paul is saying that even right after Romans 8 because, because you, you would see that kind of Romans 8 is the climax of victory.
Speaker AIt's, it's the excitement point of the book that basically none of us can fail in Jesus Christ.
Speaker ABut then he says in verse two that he has heaviness in his heart, that he has sorrow in his heart.
Speaker AWhy would he have that?
Speaker AWell, he's going to explain why he has that sadness here.
Speaker ABut what I will say is this, and I think this is important for us to note here in Romans chapter nine, is that this passage of scripture, though dealing with many topics, is essentially Paul dealing with the problem associated with the current condition of Israel.
Speaker AAnd so.
Speaker ASo what.
Speaker AWhat did it mean that Israel, for the most part, missed its Messiah?
Speaker AWhat does it say about God's power?
Speaker AWhat does it say about God's love?
Speaker AWhat does it say about Israel itself?
Speaker AWhat does it say about our present position as Christians who have confidence in God?
Speaker AThat's really what he's dealing with here.
Speaker ABut before.
Speaker ABefore Paul goes any further here, he wants to share his heart about the lost people that he loves and that he wants to bring the truth to.
Speaker ASo he says that his heart is broken over those people that don't believe in Jesus Christ.
Speaker AWe talked a little bit about this last week.
Speaker AEven in Matthew chapter 9, When Jesus comes and he sees all the people that are hurting, he sees all the people that are wandering without a shepherd.
Speaker AAnd he says that his.
Speaker AHis heart, his.
Speaker AHis mind, his.
Speaker AHis body was moved with compassion.
Speaker AAnd so the question that we have for.
Speaker AFor all of us here this morning is what is our response to those that are in the world that are in rebellion to Jesus?
Speaker AAre we against them?
Speaker AWell, we should be against their actions.
Speaker AWe should never be condoning the actions of people that are in rebellion to the Lord.
Speaker AWe, we never celebrate sin.
Speaker AWe never celebrate rebellion.
Speaker ABut the Bible does say for, for many of us as Christians, the struggle might be having compassion and motivation and desire and a broken heart over those that need Jesus Christ as Savior.
Speaker AAnd I think that this is an awesome passage to show us really where the goal should be when it comes to our love for the lost.
Speaker AYou know, we look around and, and maybe you have a broken heart for your family.
Speaker AMay.
Speaker AMaybe there's some people in your home that aren't believers and you pray for them, you share the gospel with them.
Speaker AThat's a fantastic thing.
Speaker ABut think about it from a bigger level.
Speaker AThink about it from the fact that not every single person that's in the church building on Sunday morning is a believer in Jesus Christ.
Speaker AMaybe someone's coming in, they're searching.
Speaker AMaybe someone's coming and they're a skeptic.
Speaker AWe should Never assume that the people around us are solid in their belief in Jesus Christ.
Speaker AAnd so what Paul says is that he's brokenhearted over the lost.
Speaker AHe desires to see them come to Christ.
Speaker AHe's brokenhearted over a few different things.
Speaker AOne would be the rebellion of his own people.
Speaker AHe's brokenhearted over their rebellion.
Speaker AHe's brokenhearted of their rejection of Jesus.
Speaker AHe's not broken.
Speaker AHe's not broken hearted that they persecuted him, Right?
Speaker AIf it was us, you know, if I was Paul, okay, I would be upset that they persecuted me.
Speaker AThis, this.
Speaker AThis is my narrative.
Speaker AIf I was Paul and I went into one of these cities and, and the guys who used to be my friends chase me out, whipping me, stoning me, doing all the things that they did, I would have said this.
Speaker AYou know what?
Speaker AI'm trying to serve Jesus.
Speaker AI'm trying to do my best.
Speaker AAnd all these people do is just come back and hurt me.
Speaker AI'm.
Speaker AI'm just so brokenhearted that my friends have turned their back on me.
Speaker AI. I'm just so brokenhearted that they don't love me.
Speaker AThey don't listen to my message.
Speaker AThat's where I would be in my flesh and in my mind.
Speaker AI would be brokenhearted over people betraying me.
Speaker ABut.
Speaker ABut do you know where.
Speaker AWhere Paul's brokenhearted over?
Speaker AHe's not.
Speaker AHe doesn't even care about that.
Speaker AWhat he's brokenhearted over is that they've rebelled against his Lord.
Speaker AHe.
Speaker AHe's brokenhearted over the fact that they have turned their backs against the One who has saved him and equipped Him.
Speaker AAnd so that just shows you the perspective of evangelism that's so much different than we have in our minds today is that it's all about us, usually where Paul is all about Jesus.
Speaker AAnd so ultimately, I believe this passage of Scripture can help us understand how.
Speaker AHow we can have a heart for those around us as well.
Speaker ASo he explains verse three here.
Speaker AHe says, for I wish.
Speaker ANow what I'm about to do here is I'm going to read verse three, and when you understand what verse three says, it's going to be hard for you to believe.
Speaker AIt's hard for me to believe, but it's here in Scripture.
Speaker ASo I'm going to do my best to say it in a way that I. I understand.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker AI am not saying I'm where Paul is, right here I am.
Speaker AI am not there yet.
Speaker ABut here's what Paul says.
Speaker AFor I wish.
Speaker AFor I could wish that myself were cursed from Christ for my Brethren, my kidsmen according to the flesh.
Speaker ASo you might say, what's he talking about here?
Speaker AThe way that I understand this is that Paul says, I would be willing to be separated from my Savior Jesus if my people could come to Christ.
Speaker AIf this would be a great revival with my people, my own people, my kinsmen.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AThat's a heart of compassion.
Speaker AThat's a sacrificial type of love.
Speaker ANow, we don't want to elevate Paul to a place of.
Speaker AWe want to worship him, right?
Speaker ABecause Paul was fallible.
Speaker APaul was, was not God, and Paul was far from him.
Speaker AHe was a sinful person.
Speaker AWe know that.
Speaker ABut it's a great example of what the love of Christ can do in our lives because we know that Jesus had that same heart, right?
Speaker AHe went to the cross not just for those who were kind to him, but he went to the cross for those that, as the Bible says, but God commendeth or demonstrated his love toward us in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.
Speaker AYou know, if it was me, again, I would say this.
Speaker AI'm going to really be sacrificial to those who care about me or, or that have some type of association with me.
Speaker ASo I was having this conversation with, with my dad recently.
Speaker AWe were talking about certain things.
Speaker AYou know, when my dad used to tell me growing up, he was like, you know, I take a boa for you, son.
Speaker AI die for you.
Speaker AI, I kind of understood that.
Speaker ABut I definitely understand it now with my own children, like, there, there would be no consideration for me.
Speaker AI wouldn't even think about it.
Speaker ALike, if my kids were in danger, I would jump in front of a car.
Speaker AI would do anything for them.
Speaker AI love them to death.
Speaker AI understand that.
Speaker ABut we all understand that, like, it's, it's understandable for us to sacrifice for people that are good to us.
Speaker AThat makes sense.
Speaker AThe Bible actually says that that's like the heathen do that and makes complete sense.
Speaker ABut what Jesus teaches is that we would sacrifice and do something beyond comprehension for someone that isn't kind to us, that doesn't love us.
Speaker AAnd that's exactly what Paul is saying here.
Speaker APaul says, I would sacrifice for those people so that they could come to Christ.
Speaker AThat is crazy to think about.
Speaker AAnd it's, it's beyond our human comprehension to some degree.
Speaker ABut what I will say is that I think that all of us as Christians could grow in that direction to understand that we should be able and willing to sacrifice some things to see People come to Christ.
Speaker AAnd some people would argue that Paul's using this as a metaphor, that he really doesn't mean this completely.
Speaker AI don't really take that understanding.
Speaker AI believe that that's why he's trying to explain in verses 1 and other passages here, that he's being real about what he's saying.
Speaker ABut nonetheless, I think that if we had this type of perspective, we would have a greater passion for the loss that's around us.
Speaker AYou know, a lot of us get more worked up about things that don't mean anything for the cause of the kingdom than what actually does matter.
Speaker ASo for me, you know, when someone asked me, how's your week going?
Speaker AThat's a loaded question.
Speaker ABecause as a pastor, I know I have to say it's a great week, but.
Speaker AWell, all of you know what I mean.
Speaker ASometimes when you don't want to answer that it's a good week, you know, like.
Speaker ABut.
Speaker ABut a lot of times.
Speaker AWhy is our week bad?
Speaker AWell, maybe, you know, I'm not feeling well, or maybe someone was rude to me at work, or maybe something happened with my, my.
Speaker AMy family or my spouse.
Speaker AI don't know what it is.
Speaker AThere could be a lot of reasons why we would say we're having a bad week.
Speaker AAnd a lot of times we get so worked up about that, and sometimes it's things that don't even really matter to us, even in our own personal life.
Speaker ASome of us.
Speaker AAnd I'm going to try to be as kind as I can be with this.
Speaker ASome of us get worked up about what we see on the news, and it makes us have a bad week just because something has been told to us.
Speaker AAnd I'm not saying we shouldn't watch the news, but I would say is what.
Speaker AWatch the news with the lens of the gospel and, and watch the news with the lens of knowing that God is in control and that you are a believer in a lost world.
Speaker ABut what I will say is this, oftentimes, things that don't matter in the grand scheme of eternity take up our minds, take up our hearts, take up our time, take up our anger, take up our bitterness, and we don't do the things that we should be doing within the cause of the kingdom of God.
Speaker AAnd so Paul says, I'm focused.
Speaker AI know what I have before me, and that is to lead these folks to Christ.
Speaker ANow, we do know that Paul is called to be an apostle to the Gentiles.
Speaker ASo his sole focus is not just his own people, even though he has a heart for his own people.
Speaker ABut Paul does have opportunities to preach the Gospel in other places, which we're going to talk about later on in the book of Romans as well.
Speaker ASo he says in verse three, basically, that for his kinsmen, according to the flesh, he would be separated from Christ so that they could come to Christ.
Speaker AThat, that is an amazing thing to think about.
Speaker AAnd I think that that's something that we even see with, with Moses in Exodus chapter 32.
Speaker AMoses has that same spirit.
Speaker AIn Exodus 32, Moses returned unto the Lord and said, oh, this people have sinned a great sin, and I made them gods of gold.
Speaker AYet now if thou will forgive their sin, and if not, blot me, I pray thee out of thy book which thou hast written.
Speaker ASo even we see that Moses pictured that same type of love for his people when it came to his relationship with God.
Speaker AAnd I think that's something for all of us to understand.
Speaker ABut of course, we know that Paul shares the heart of Jesus, who was cursed on behalf of others, that he might bring salvation to, to many.
Speaker AAnd so you would say, okay, so why is he so brokenhearted?
Speaker AWhy is he talking about the Israelites?
Speaker AWhy does that matter?
Speaker AWell, verse four says this.
Speaker AHe says, lest you think he's not talking about the Israelites, by the way, some people might think like, well, he's not really talking about those people that are Israelites.
Speaker AIn verse three, he's, he says in verse four, who are the Israelites?
Speaker AAnd he's about to explain why he has a heart for them and what they were gifted in when being the chosen people of God.
Speaker ANow, there are some people that will argue this.
Speaker AAnd, and we're going to break this down in Romans, chapter nine.
Speaker ANot all of the people that were part of God's chosen people in the Old Testament were saved.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker AThe Bible says that from the book of Genesis all the way to the book of Revelation, people are saved by faith.
Speaker AThat's, that's the book of Hebrews, Hebrews, chapter 11.
Speaker AYou can look that up.
Speaker ANobody was saved by ever keeping the law.
Speaker ANobody was ever saved by being born into a certain bloodline.
Speaker AEverybody, throughout all of history is saved through faith.
Speaker AAnd so a lot of people will read Romans chapter 9 and think that Paul is specifically only talking about individual salvific salvation, meaning salvation that brings them to everlasting life with Jesus Christ.
Speaker ABut that's not essentially what he's talking about here.
Speaker AHe's talking about Israel, the people of Israel and what they were chosen to do.
Speaker AWhy were the people of Israel chosen?
Speaker AWell, we don't know why they were chosen, but we do know what they were chosen for.
Speaker AVerse 4.
Speaker AHe says, who were Israelites to whom pertaineth the adoption?
Speaker AMeaning they were adopted into the family of God and the glory and the covenants.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AMoses, the, the Mosaic covenant, the Abrahamic covenant, all these covenants come through the line of, of Israel.
Speaker AAnd he says the covenants were entrusted to them and the giving of the law, they, they had the, they had the benefit, they had the blessing of being the mouthpiece for God for so many years and the service of God and the promises.
Speaker AVerse 5, who are the fathers?
Speaker AThey were gifted in being blessed with having all the patriarchs and the prophets of whom as concerning the flesh, Christ came.
Speaker AAnd even so, the Bible says that Jesus came to the Israelites, and so he's saying that these are all the blessings of Israel being the chosen people.
Speaker ANow, there's a lot of people that are arguing that today and arguing whose role is what.
Speaker AAnd there's different elements of doctrine and theology, but what we're basically going to understand throughout this whole passage is this.
Speaker ASalvation is given to all who believe, regardless of nationality.
Speaker AI need you to know that.
Speaker ASo, so I'm not saying that the Israel being the Israelites that are chosen by God, every one of the Israelites for all of history, are saved.
Speaker ANo, they don't believe in Jesus Christ as Savior.
Speaker AThey don't have faith in God.
Speaker AThey are.
Speaker AThey're not saved.
Speaker ASo all are saved through Jesus, regardless of nationality.
Speaker ABut Paul does explain, even back in Romans chapter three and in Romans chapter nine, that there was a blessing for Israel as God's chosen people, both past and future.
Speaker AAnd we're going to talk about those two things as well.
Speaker ASo just note that what I'm saying here is that not all of the people that were born through the line of Abraham were saved, were walking with God.
Speaker AAnd actually at this point in time in Romans chapter nine, many were not.
Speaker ASo what is he saying here?
Speaker AHe says that they as people rejected the things of God and so therefore there's brokenness there.
Speaker AAnd so he says in verse five, they were even blessed with having Christ come through their line, who is overall God blessed forever.
Speaker AAmen.
Speaker AAnd so the first five verses is Paul explaining what, why he's brokenhearted over the nation of Israel.
Speaker AEssentially, they were gifted all these blessings about being the mouthpiece of the word of God through the law, through the prophets, through, through the patriarchs, through the covenants, and ultimately through Christ, and yet they missed the mark.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause they did not believe in Jesus.
Speaker AJesus was the stumbling block.
Speaker AYou remember back.
Speaker ARemember, they thought that Jesus, as Jesus, was coming down the Palm Sunday road, riding on a donkey, they were proclaiming hosanna, he's come to save us.
Speaker AThey were waving palm branches, they were throwing clothes on the ground.
Speaker AAnd they were doing all this to basically expect that Jesus was going to come as a political leader that was going to free them from the bondage of Rome.
Speaker AAnd when Jesus didn't come that way, they turned their backs on him.
Speaker AAnd you know that even Jesus wept over them because they did not believe.
Speaker AAnd so this is Paul trying to bring it all together and explain how this can all cohesively be part of the message of God.
Speaker ASo Paul continues to amplify and develop these points throughout the whole next section.
Speaker AAnd so he explains that at the time that this is written, many Israelites did not believe in the very words that had been entrusted to them.
Speaker ASo God entrusts the Israelites with the Word of God.
Speaker AThey don't even trust in that anymore.
Speaker AAnd so he shows that not every Israelite from the seed of Abraham is chosen for the noble purpose of carrying the Word of God.
Speaker ASo he's about to explain that some parts of the Israelite people were chosen for the Word to be proclaimed through them and others were not.
Speaker AThere's going to be many people that take the passage in Romans chapter nine and basically say this.
Speaker AFrom the very beginning of time, God loves some and saved salmon others he hated and did not save.
Speaker ADeterminism, however you want to call it.
Speaker ABut what we're going to see here in this passage is that I think there's a different perspective to take when it comes to when he gets talking about Jacob and Esau.
Speaker AAnd so I know that this is a complex topic.
Speaker AI know that there's a lot here.
Speaker AWe're not going to dive into all of it here.
Speaker ABut what I am going to say is this morning I'm going to ask you a few questions, then I want to give you a few applications, and then we're going to close off here this morning.
Speaker ABut it says that the one question that could be posed is, is if Israel has failed their job, if you will, they were given all of the law, they were given the covenants, they were given the.
Speaker AThe promises, they were given the prophets, they were given the patriarchs, they were even given the Messiah to come through their line, and they failed.
Speaker AThey didn't believe.
Speaker AWhat does that mean?
Speaker ASome people would have argued and still argue that God failed then, right?
Speaker AIf God chose Israel to do his work and they didn't do his work, has God failed?
Speaker AAnd if God failed the nation of Israel, will He fail us?
Speaker ARight, because we're part now of the elect.
Speaker AWe're part of the family of God.
Speaker AWe have confidence in Romans 8.
Speaker AAnd you just tell me in Romans 8 that he is going to not allow anything to separate me from his love.
Speaker ABut then now, Romans 9, some things are separated from from the love of God in Israel.
Speaker AHow can that be?
Speaker AHas God failed to keep those that he chose and that he loved?
Speaker AThese are all questions that are being posed.
Speaker AAnd if so, will he fail us who believed and are loved?
Speaker ANow, as we see in Romans chapter eight, so, so essentially there's a blessing to be an Israelite, but not all are chosen to carry that blessing.
Speaker ASo has God failed?
Speaker AAnd again, Paul is going to answer that question.
Speaker AHe always answers his questions.
Speaker AIn verse 6 he says, not as though the word of God hath taken none effect, meaning this.
Speaker AIt's not that God's word has failed.
Speaker AGod has not failed.
Speaker AHe has never failed and he never will fail.
Speaker AAnd then he explains, for they are not all Israel which are of Israel.
Speaker AIsrael, meaning not all of Israel, is called to present the line of the truth of the word of God.
Speaker AGod never fails.
Speaker AIt is those who lack faith and openly reject Christ who fail.
Speaker AGod's purpose for Israel didn't fail.
Speaker AGod's purpose for us won't fail.
Speaker AAnd so Paul explains the answer that not every descendant of Israel is entrusted with the word of God, nor is everyone who is a child of God made a child on the basis that he or she is a natural descendant of Abraham.
Speaker ANow we're going to get into a lot of nuances here in Romans chapter nine.
Speaker AAnd I don't want to lose you, so I'm going to wrap it up.
Speaker APose here today is, well, if God rejected Israel, does he reject some of us?
Speaker AAnd we're going to talk more about that along with Romans chapter 9.
Speaker ABut what I will say is that anybody who comes to Christ in faith will be seen.
Speaker AThere's no one that God is going to reject that comes to him in faith.
Speaker AThe Bible does say that God does reject some people because of the decisions that they make in rebellion to God.
Speaker ANow there's going to be this interesting story of Esau and Jacob that we're going to study coming up here in the next few weeks and there's going to be more discussion with that.
Speaker ABut what I will want, want you to know here this morning that some people that fall into this area of determinism would say this, that some people from the beginning of time had no choice but.
Speaker ABut to just be unsaved that God did not allow them to be saved.
Speaker AWhat I will tell you is that I believe that's not true.
Speaker AI believe that, as the Bible says, that he is not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.
Speaker AAnd the Bible says in Romans or in John 3:16, for God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him.
Speaker AAnd so we have to rectify those two things.
Speaker AAnd we have to see that sometimes from a different perspective that God is not specifically talking about salvation here.
Speaker AAnd as much as he's calling for the idea that God is using certain people to present the word of God to the world.
Speaker AAnd that's what we're going to be talking about.
Speaker ABut the lessons that we can take away with us here In Romans chapter 9 is this.
Speaker APaul has a burden for those that are rejected.
Speaker AJesus.
Speaker AHis burden is not because they persecuted him.
Speaker AThat burden is because they need Jesus as Savior.
Speaker AHis heart is for his people, his nation.
Speaker AAnd the question would be for us here this morning is do we have a heart for the people of our nation?
Speaker ADo we have a heart for people of other nations?
Speaker AThe Bible says in Acts, chapter one, verse eight, that we are to go to our Jerusalem, we're to go to our Judea, we're to go to Samaria, which is the people that we're not used to.
Speaker AWe're to go to the uttermost part of the earth.
Speaker AWhere is our heart when it comes to the profession of the proclamation of the gospel of Jesus Christ?
Speaker AGo all the way back to where we started.
Speaker AWe started in Romans 1:16.
Speaker AFor I'm not ashamed of the gospel.
Speaker APaul is obviously not ashamed of the gospel.
Speaker ATherefore he says, I'm going to bring it to people that love me.
Speaker AI'm going to bring it to people who don't love me.
Speaker AI'm going to bring it to people who persecute me.
Speaker AI'm going to bring it to people who reject me.
Speaker AAnd ultimately their rejection is going to bring them to a place of judgment.
Speaker ATherefore, I need to be more passionate about when I am preaching.
Speaker AAnd so we're going to see that, yes, God does have the right to show mercy upon who he shows mercy to.
Speaker AI can't sit here and dictate to God what makes him righteous and what makes him Unrighteous.
Speaker AAll I have to say is that I look at from the whole scope of Scripture that God has a plan and he has a plan for those who trust in him in faith.
Speaker AGod still has a plan for Israel, yet it to be in the future.
Speaker AAnd we're going to see in Romans chapter 11 that there is this idea that there will be a great revival there one day.
Speaker ABut the Bible says until that day, until they turn to Christ, it's not a matter of their bloodline.
Speaker AHe tears that down earlier on in scripture.
Speaker AHe tears that down in many passages of scripture.
Speaker AIt's no longer about what bloodline you have where you're born into.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker AAnd I'm thankful for that.
Speaker AI'm thankful for the fact that God could say someone that's as broken and as.
Speaker AAs limited as me, I don't deserve the love of Jesus Christ.
Speaker AI don't deserve it at all.
Speaker ASometimes people are tempted to think that because I'm a good person, God loves me.
Speaker AGod does not love me because of the way that I look.
Speaker AGod does not love me because where I'm born, God does not love me because how smart I am.
Speaker AGod doesn't love me because of any of those exterior reasons that some of us might think that God loves us.
Speaker AGod loves us because he loves us.
Speaker AGod loves us because we are his creation.
Speaker AAnd in spite of the fact that we are in many ways in rebellion to him, he still loves us and he still extends grace that shows the patience of God.
Speaker ASome people say, why isn't God just taking us all away?
Speaker AI've been using this analogy a lot.
Speaker AIf it was me, if it was me, I'd be done.
Speaker AI'd be like, all right, guys, you messed it up.
Speaker AIt's over.
Speaker AAnd the Bible does say that one day God's righteous hand will drop upon the world and that every knee will bow and every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.
Speaker ABut until then, why?
Speaker AThe question is why?
Speaker AThe reason why.
Speaker AThe reason why I believe God has not done that yet is because he is righteous and he is patient and he is loving and he's extending that time of grace for many people.
Speaker ABut what I will tell you is that the Bible says that we need to get busy.
Speaker ARemember last week?
Speaker AThe harvest is plenteous, but the laborers are few.
Speaker ALet's get busy about the process of proclaiming the gospel to the world.
Speaker ALet's not be ashamed of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Speaker AI don't expect any of us today to have the same testimony as Paul does.
Speaker AThere In Romans, chapter nine, that's a big step to say that you would be willing to give up your relationship with Christ for other people.
Speaker ABut what I will say is that I think all of us can take that step closer to having a heart for people that are lost, that are having a heart for people that are broken.
Speaker ANever to, never to justify sin.
Speaker ABy the way, that's sometimes how the gospel's preached in our culture today.
Speaker ALike, to win people, we have to be okay with everything that they do.
Speaker AFolks.
Speaker AI don't ever see that in scripture.
Speaker AI, I never see Jesus when he's preaching the message, even to those people that are sinners, that he comes in and he condones what they do.
Speaker AIt's always go and sin no more.
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AIt's always about changing their life.
Speaker ABut at the same time, there's grace extended.
Speaker ASo we have to understand that there's.
Speaker AThat there's that barrier there that sometimes we struggle with is how much do we allow for.
Speaker AWhen it comes to them coming to Christ, folks, the only thing that is a delineating line between who is saved and who is unsaved is faith in Jesus Christ.
Speaker AAll the other things of spiritual growth come after the Holy Spirit indwells and people are taught.
Speaker ASo what we do is we lead people to Jesus.
Speaker AWe lead people to the truth.
Speaker AIf we say, okay, you can't come, you can't be saved unless you clean up your life.
Speaker AThat, that's missing the point.
Speaker ABecause the only way that we can clean up our life is by coming to Jesus Christ.
Speaker ASo as a church, what do we do?
Speaker AWe don't worry about, oh, well, we only invite people to our church who look like they'd fit in.
Speaker AWe invite everybody, right?
Speaker AI don't care what your background is, I don't care what sin you're dealing with.
Speaker AWe welcome them in.
Speaker AWhat do we do?
Speaker AWe don't just tell them, hey, be warm to fill and go.
Speaker AWe preach the gospel and we preach change, right?
Speaker AShow up as you are, but leave different.
Speaker AWe should leave differently.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker AThe church should change us.
Speaker AJesus should change us.
Speaker AThink about.
Speaker AThink I'm.
Speaker AI'm gonna get on my hobby horse for just like two minutes.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker ADon't count that.
Speaker ADon't.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker AThe idea in American Christianity that we can just come into church, hear a good heartwarming message, go home and leave unchanged is not a biblical message.
Speaker AThe biblical message is that Jesus changes us.
Speaker AHe changes the way we think.
Speaker AHe changes the way we live.
Speaker AHe changes the way we love.
Speaker AHe changes the way we serve.
Speaker AHe changes the way that we work.
Speaker AHe changes the way we do everything.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause he's a life changer.
Speaker AHe's a life giver.
Speaker AWe're born again.
Speaker AWe're new in life.
Speaker AAnd so you might say, well, I've gone to church for 50 years and my.
Speaker AI'm the same as I was when I started coming.
Speaker AWell, it's never too late.
Speaker AIt's never too late.
Speaker ALet's change today.
Speaker AAnd the idea would be this.
Speaker AIt's not your change that makes you saved, because that's a lot of people think that there's something out there called lordship salvation, which would be this.
Speaker ABasically, you.
Speaker AYou've got to be a good person to prove that you're saved.
Speaker AWell, none of us are going to be perfect, right?
Speaker ANone of us can completely keep the word of God.
Speaker ABut what it does say in the Bible is that we are to transition, to be transformed into newness of life.
Speaker AAnd so we're going to talk about that as we come along.
Speaker AWe're going to be talking about the transformation.
Speaker AThat's really what Romans 12 is about.
Speaker ARoman.
Speaker ARomans 12 on is how we live out what we believe.
Speaker AWe live out what we believe.
Speaker ASo we're going to be going through some heavy stuff in Romans 9, 10, and 11.
Speaker AOkay, don't skip that.
Speaker AOkay, come.
Speaker ABecause there's some really interesting things that we're going to be talking about and things that might be debated.
Speaker ABut what I will say is this.
Speaker AToday, let's think about how Jesus can change our life.
Speaker AAnd just as much as he changes our life, that's the message that we take to other people.
Speaker ALike, if I come to somebody and I witness to them and I say, okay, hey, look, come to church and you'll.
Speaker AAnd you'll learn how to cook a good, you know, potato salad or you're not cooking potato salad, but, you know, preparing a potato salad, right, the kapala.
Speaker AWe're missing the point.
Speaker AHey, come to church and you know, come.
Speaker ACome to church and you can learn about what it means to have friends.
Speaker ACome to church and you can learn what it means to do whatever.
Speaker AIf we're missing the point of why we come together, that's not.
Speaker AEvangelism is not telling people that church can make your life better.
Speaker AEvangelism is telling people that the word of God and the Gospel of Jesus Christ can give them life and eternal life.
Speaker AThat is.
Speaker AAnd so I want you to think about that as we move forward here in this.
Speaker AIn this study.
Speaker AWell, I'm going to ask if you're able to to stand with me, every head bowed, every eye closed.
Speaker AWe're going to have the music playing here.
Speaker AAnd I know that it was somewhat of a different message because there was a lot of lead up to Romans 9.
Speaker ASo I will say this.
Speaker AGod can speak in different ways.
Speaker AWe know that.
Speaker AWe know that God could speak to somebody in one pew about Romans 1, and God could speak to someone in the other pew about Romans 8.
Speaker AIt's not for me to decide how God is speaking to you, but what I will say is that the truth of God is presented here this morning through the truth of who Jesus Christ is.
Speaker AThe question might be this.
Speaker AThis morning, have you trusted in Jesus Christ as your savior?
Speaker ANot if you're a good person, not if you're working, not if you're trying your best, not if you're going to church.
Speaker ABut that have you individually trusted in Jesus Christ as your personal savior, faith in the person and work of Jesus Christ.
Speaker AThat's it.
Speaker ABut then secondly, if you have trusted in that, Romans 1, am I ashamed of the gospel of Jesus or am I proclaiming it?
Speaker ARomans 3, have I recognized that my sin is what has hindered me, that has caused me pain?
Speaker AAnd Romans 6, have I trusted in the gift of salvation?
Speaker AAnd if I have trust in the gift of salvation, am I preparing that and presenting that to those around me?
Speaker ADo I have that type of compassion that Paul has there?
Speaker ADo I have that type of desire and brokenheartedness over those that are in rebellion?
Speaker AIf, if not, let's ask this morning for God to give us that type of compassion and brokenheartedness and motivation to spread the word of the truth of the Gospel.
Speaker ALet me tell you who this morning, and I'm not trying to preach a second message, but there's so many distractions out here today.
Speaker AIn our world, the enemy wants you to be distracted from the number one mission, and that is the mission of glorifying our Savior and telling other people about him.
Speaker AIf there's anything distracting you from that right now, if there's something that's holding you back, if there's something that's causing you inner turmoil and darkness and hindrance to what God has for you, come this morning and give that over to him.
Speaker AAsk the Lord to give you wisdom and strength and discernment to be busy about the work of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Speaker ALord, I pray that you'd be in this time of invitation, working hearts and lives.
Speaker AI pray that you can move us to a place of following you to the best of our ability in accordance to your word.
Speaker AWe thank you for the gospel.
Speaker AWe're thankful for the hope.
Speaker AWe're thankful for salvation.
Speaker ASo I pray that this morning there's someone who needs you, that they come forward and see in the Word of God what it means to know you as Savior.
Speaker AHere today we ask all these things in Jesus name.
Speaker AAmen.
Speaker AAs the music plays, follow as the Lord leads here today.
Speaker AThank you again for listening to the Middletown Baptist Church podcast.
Speaker AI hope that this sermon has been a blessing for you.
Speaker AYou would like to find out more information about our church or this sermon, you can find us at middletownbaptistchurch.org or find us on Facebook or YouTube.
Speaker AYou can also email me directly at Josh Massaroiddletownbaptistchurch dot com if you've enjoyed this podcast.
Speaker APlease please subscribe and follow along for future podcast and updates.
Speaker AThank you so much.
Speaker AGod Bless.
Speaker AHave a wonderful day.