The Nature of Sin and the Promise of Redemption

The salient point of today’s sermon, delivered by Pastor Josh Massaro, centers on the profound necessity of understanding both our inherent need for a savior and the identity of that savior, Jesus Christ. As we delve into the third chapter of Romans, we are confronted with the stark reality that all humanity stands guilty before God, devoid of righteousness and incapable of achieving salvation through our own deeds. Pastor Massaro elucidates that justification is not earned by works, but rather is a divine declaration of righteousness bestowed upon those who embrace faith in Christ. This discourse invites us to reflect on our spiritual condition, emphasizing that true understanding of God necessitates a recognition of our sinfulness and the unparalleled grace manifested through Jesus. As we ponder these truths, we are urged to align our lives with the transformative power of faith, which alone can redeem and restore.
Takeaways:
- This podcast episode emphasizes the profound concept of theology as the pursuit of understanding God's nature and actions, particularly in the context of human salvation.
- Pastor Josh Massaro elucidates the critical distinction between justification by faith and the fallacy of relying on one's own moral works for salvation.
- The episode articulates the universal human condition of sinfulness, asserting that all have fallen short of God's glory, thereby necessitating a savior.
- A key theme presented in this sermon is the grace of God, which provides redemption through Jesus Christ, emphasizing that salvation is a gift rather than a merit-based achievement.
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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 - Opening the Book of Romans
00:38 - Understanding Theology and Our Need for a Savior
13:39 - Understanding Righteousness and Sin
31:52 - The Righteousness of God
40:27 - Understanding Salvation by Faith Alone
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 AWe're going to go ahead and open up our Bibles to the book of Romans, Romans, chapter number three.
Speaker AWe have finished chapter one and two in this series called Theology Matters, and we need to go back and talk about what theology is.
Speaker AWhat is theology?
Speaker AWell, literally just means the study of God.
Speaker ABut when it comes to the life of a believer, theology is knowing God, having an understanding of who God is and what he has done for us.
Speaker AAnd so it's more than just the head knowledge, though.
Speaker AThat's where it starts.
Speaker AIt goes to a place in our life where it grows in our love for him, when we understand who he is and understand what he has done for us.
Speaker AAnd in chapter two, and really half of most of chapter three, if not all of chapter three, Paul is making a case for the need for a savior.
Speaker ANumber one, our need for a savior, and number two, who that savior is.
Speaker AThat savior is Jesus Christ.
Speaker AIt's not salvation by works.
Speaker ARemember, we talked about two different words, two words that start with the J.
Speaker AWe have justification.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AThat's that idea that God declares us righteous, that God saves us from our sin.
Speaker AAnd then on the other side of that is God's judgment.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AThat's God's righteous wrath given out to those who are in rebellion to him, those that have no belief in him.
Speaker AAnd so that's really what Paul is wrestling with here.
Speaker AHe's saying, look, we need to understand what God does in salvation.
Speaker AAnd we also need to understand what God does in judgment.
Speaker ABecause if we are believers in Jesus Christ, we need to understand what we have in him and how he has saved us and how we don't earn it.
Speaker ABut ultimately, we trust in the work of Jesus Christ.
Speaker ABut there's a lot of people out there that don't believe that they need a savior, at least in the terms that the Bible puts it.
Speaker AThey say, you know what?
Speaker AI love God, but I think I could do it myself.
Speaker AI trust in my good, I trust in my religion, I trust in my church, I trust in my money.
Speaker AI trust in my strength, whatever it might be.
Speaker AAnd so what Paul is dealing with here is there.
Speaker AThere are people who, in their ignorance Say they don't need a savior, right?
Speaker AThat that was the Gentile.
Speaker AThe Gentile didn't know the law of God.
Speaker AThe Gentile didn't understand what it meant to be religious.
Speaker AAnd so we can't rely on our ignorance to save us, because for all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.
Speaker AWe're going to talk about that in Romans Chapter three.
Speaker ABut on the other side of things, information doesn't save us.
Speaker ABecause on the other side of those that are ignorant to the truth of God came those who said, you know what?
Speaker AWe're Jewish, we're religious, God spoke to us.
Speaker AAnd so therefore that's all we need.
Speaker AWe don't need to believe in faith.
Speaker AWe are good enough.
Speaker AAnd Paul says, both parties, those that are ignorant to the truth and those that have the information are still not saved.
Speaker AThose that are saved are those that come to Jesus Christ in faith.
Speaker AAnd so he deals with the moral man.
Speaker AHe deals with the man who is living in public sin, as we saw in Romans Chapter one.
Speaker ABut then we get to Romans Chapter three.
Speaker AAnd what Paul does essentially is he gets ahead of the game.
Speaker AAnd he says, I know that there's going to be some opposition to what I've taught you so far.
Speaker ANo doubt Paul had already dealt with people asking him questions, putting up a defense to their way of thinking.
Speaker AAnd so the first question that Paul deals with here in Romans Chapter three is this.
Speaker ASo if salvation is by faith alone and not by where we're born, and not by our traditions and not by our religion, what advantage then have the Jew?
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ASo Paul asks a question, but he's asking a question for many people who might have that question.
Speaker AHe says, so what does it mean to be a Jew, then?
Speaker AWhat's the.
Speaker AWhat's the benefit of that?
Speaker AOr what profit is there of circumcision?
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd so Paul carefully explained in Romans Chapter two, that the possession of the law, any act of religion for the Jewish person, was not going to save them.
Speaker AAnd so he says, okay, so you might ask me, what does it mean to be a Jew?
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker AWhy is it so important to be a Jew?
Speaker AIs there any importance there?
Speaker AWell, we're going to study more in Romans chapter 9, 10 and 11 about that.
Speaker ABut he does answer.
Speaker AHe says in verse two, much every way, meaning, yes, there is a blessing there chiefly, first and foremost, because that unto them were committed the oracles of God.
Speaker ASo he says, yes, there.
Speaker AThere was an advantage of being born into that culture.
Speaker AIt was because God entrusted them with the truth.
Speaker AOf the Word.
Speaker ARemember, the law was given to them, the.
Speaker AThe Word of God.
Speaker AThe revelation of God was given to them, and in time it was then revealed to the whole world.
Speaker ASo he says there is a blessing in that.
Speaker AThe blessing is as the gospel is, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.
Speaker AThat's Romans, chapter 1, verse 16.
Speaker AHe says there's.
Speaker AThere's an amazing blessing there, and that is because they were entrusted.
Speaker AThey were given the oracles of God, the word of God.
Speaker APaul is going to later expand upon that advantage in Romans chapter nine.
Speaker AWe won't get there today.
Speaker ABut he says there is a blessing.
Speaker ASo, so don't use that as an opposition because there were some saying, well, Paul, what you're teaching is this.
Speaker AIt doesn't matter how we're born, it doesn't matter who we are.
Speaker AAnd so essentially, basically there's this attitude of, well, it really doesn't matter.
Speaker AWe're going to see how that transfers over to verses three and four.
Speaker AVerse three says, for what if some did not believe?
Speaker AAnd so the fact is, is that there were people that time that were born into the Jewish customs that did not believe the gospel.
Speaker AFor the most part, they rejected the Gospel completely.
Speaker AAnd so what does that mean to God's faithfulness to them?
Speaker ADoes that mean that God is not powerful?
Speaker ADoes that mean that God is not loving?
Speaker ASo for what if some did not believe, shall their unbelief?
Speaker AShall their unbelief make the faith of God without effect?
Speaker ANow, I know that this is some deep stuff here this morning.
Speaker AI know this is Family Sunday.
Speaker AAnd so I'm going to ask if you do your best to follow me, I'm going to try to do my best to clarify all the thinking here that Paul is putting out here through the inspiration of the Word.
Speaker ABut essentially what he's asking is this.
Speaker AHe says this, what if people don't believe?
Speaker AGod's people, the Jewish people, what if they don't believe?
Speaker ADoes their unbelief mean that God is not faithful to them?
Speaker ADoes that mean that God has stopped in his love for them?
Speaker AIt's a true question.
Speaker ABecause a lot of people might think that maybe God has failed.
Speaker AAnd so.
Speaker ASo the fact that the Jewish people as a whole at this point had rejected the gospel, it didn't mean that God wasn't faithful to them.
Speaker AIt doesn't mean that God's love for them was in vain.
Speaker AIt didn't mean that God's work was useless.
Speaker AAnd so essentially what he's going to say here is that no, he reminds them that God will is always justified by his actions.
Speaker AVerse four, he says, God forbid, that's one of Paul's favorite saints.
Speaker AGod forbid.
Speaker AThat is not true.
Speaker AGod is not stopped in his faithfulness to his people.
Speaker AHe says, yea, let God be true, but every man a liar.
Speaker AWhat he's essentially saying is this.
Speaker AAnytime we question God's goodness, we're the ones that are wrong.
Speaker AGod is good in every sense, in his judgment, in his faithfulness, in everything.
Speaker AAnd so there's a lot of people that have a hard time dealing with God, allowing for difficulty in this world.
Speaker AA lot of people that even claim to be somewhat religious have a problem with talking about God's judgment upon those that are in rebellion.
Speaker AAnd so for the what we see is this.
Speaker AA lot of people avoid the talk of judgment.
Speaker AThey avoid talking about the judgment of God.
Speaker ABut what we see here is he says, no, we can't avoid the judgment of God because if we question God's character, if we question God's goodness, what are we doing?
Speaker AWe're essentially lying.
Speaker AWe're lying to ourselves and we're lying to Him.
Speaker AHe says, God is always true.
Speaker AAnd so think about it this way.
Speaker AIf everybody in the world saw something different than God, it's not a democracy, it's God is right, we are all wrong.
Speaker ASo if I'm seeing things wrong in accordance to the theology of God, if I'm looking at the word of God and saying no, that that's morally not what I think is a good thing, guess what?
Speaker AI'm wrong because I am a liar in my flesh.
Speaker AI fall short in my wisdom, I fall short in my morality, I definitely fall short.
Speaker ABut God, in our theology, what we believe and what the scripture teaches is that God is completely worth holy in every way.
Speaker ASo if someone says, well, if God loves the Jewish people, why do all the people not believe?
Speaker AThat means he's stopped.
Speaker AThat means he's pulled back his love for them.
Speaker ANo, the Bible says that if there ever is a discrepancy in our way of thinking, it's our problem, not His.
Speaker AHe says, as it is written, that thou mightest be justified in thy sayings and thou mightest overcome when thou art judged.
Speaker ABut if our unrighteousness commend the righteousness of God.
Speaker ASo now he's going to ask another question here, and this is where you have to really put your thinking caps on because he's going to basically follow human logic and say this.
Speaker AIf our unrighteousness shows God's Righteousness even more, why does it matter?
Speaker AWhy does what we do matter?
Speaker AAnd he basically is going to ask this question, if doing wrong shows God's power in judgment, why don't we all just do wrong?
Speaker AWhy don't we all just live in sin?
Speaker ABecause that's going to show God's power even more.
Speaker AAnd you would say, what?
Speaker AWhat is that?
Speaker AThat, that doesn't make any sense.
Speaker AThat's the teaching of abuse of grace.
Speaker AIf God is going to be gracious and God is going to be completely perfect and God is going to be glorified through his judgment, why don't we all just get judged by God and make God look better?
Speaker AAnd it says there in verse number five, what shall we say is God's unrighteousness?
Speaker AWho taketh vengeance?
Speaker AHe says, is God wrong by doing this?
Speaker AIs God wrong by judging?
Speaker AGod forbid.
Speaker AFor then how shall God judge the world?
Speaker ASo this is a very interesting concept here.
Speaker AWhat he essentially says is that, hey, the counter argument that someone is bringing to Paul is if my unrighteousness will demonstrate God's righteousness, how can God judge me?
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ABecause what he's saying is this.
Speaker AGod is going to be glorified no matter what.
Speaker ASo, so God is going to be glorified when we're righteous and God is going to be glorified though we are unrighteous.
Speaker AHe's going to be glorified through the judgment because he's holy.
Speaker AAnd so he gets glory for his judgment and for his salvation.
Speaker AAnd so what the person is saying is, if my unrighteousness will demonstrate God's righteousness, how can God judge me because it's bringing him glory.
Speaker ASo essentially what someone is asking here is this.
Speaker AIt's the classic question of why can God judge me if he already knows that I'm going to sin?
Speaker AWhy can God judge me if he's completely righteous and he's going to get glory through all of this?
Speaker AAnd so essentially it's this, how can God judge the world?
Speaker AHow is he moral in judging the world?
Speaker ABut go back to verse number five, because he says, this is God unrighteous who taketh vengeance?
Speaker AAnd then there's this phrase here in the King James.
Speaker AIt says, I speak as a man.
Speaker AWhat is he saying here?
Speaker AIn the original Greek, he's saying this.
Speaker AThis is the way that the world thinks.
Speaker AThis is worldly logic.
Speaker ASo in worldly logic it's this.
Speaker AIf God already knows that we're going to do wrong, if God is glorified through his judgment upon those that are in sin, then how is God righteous in doing this?
Speaker AIt just doesn't make sense to the worldly mind.
Speaker ABut we have to go back and we have to understand the theology of God.
Speaker AI know this is deep here this morning, but let's look at it.
Speaker AVerse 6, he says, God forbid, then how shall God judge the world?
Speaker AFor if the truth of God have more abounded through my lie unto his glory, which why yet am I also judged as a sinner?
Speaker AAnd not rather as we be slanderously reported and as some affirm that we say, let us do evil, that good may come whose damnation.
Speaker ASo he's basically playing the other side of the coin.
Speaker AHe says there's people that say it doesn't matter what we do, that what we're preaching in the grace of God means that we can just keep sinning.
Speaker AAnd by the way, you see that there in the parentheses, he says, as we be slanderously reported and as some affirm that we say.
Speaker ASo people are saying to Paul, if you preach God's grace, if you preach God's power, if you preach God's holiness, then basically everyone's saying, you can just live the way that you want to live, because God's going to do his thing anyway.
Speaker AGod's going to judge, God's going to save, God's going to be glorified, so why does it matter?
Speaker AAnd he says, no, those people that accuse us of that thinking are missing the point.
Speaker AHe says that they're going to face judgment for that decision.
Speaker AThat's at the end of verse number eight.
Speaker ASo if the truth of God hath more bounded through my lie or my sin unto his glory, why yet am I also judged as a sinner?
Speaker AWell, that's the case that he's making.
Speaker AFor all have sinned and come short of the glory of God.
Speaker AIt's God's holiness and his perfection that allows him to judge us fairly for our sin.
Speaker AAnd so we have to understand there's a big term here today that we have to.
Speaker AWe don't have to know the term itself, but we have to know its meaning.
Speaker AAnd that is harmartiology.
Speaker AThat's the study of sin.
Speaker AWe have to understand the impact of sin in our life.
Speaker AWe have to understand the definition of sin.
Speaker ANumber one, the definition of sin is literally missing the mark of God.
Speaker ASo God sets a mark, by the way, that's the law, right?
Speaker AGod gives as the oracles of God.
Speaker AHe gave the law to the Jewish people.
Speaker AAnd he says, this is my heart.
Speaker AThis is what it means to live a life of righteousness.
Speaker AAnd essentially what we can see is that through the law, all of us, all of us fall short of the glory of God.
Speaker AThat's what verse number 10 is going to tell us.
Speaker AThere is none righteous.
Speaker ANo, not one.
Speaker ASo sin is missing the mark.
Speaker ANow, some could argue, well, that person misses the mark more than me.
Speaker AOkay, well, we know in other passages of Scripture that if we miss the mark once, we're guilty of them all.
Speaker ANow, that does not mean this.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker ASo, by the way, there's a lot of false teaching with sin these days.
Speaker AWhat that means is this.
Speaker AAll sin is equal.
Speaker ASo therefore, if you sin in this area, you might as well sin in all the areas, right?
Speaker AIt's not what he's saying.
Speaker AHe's not saying that, hey, if you lie, you might as well steal.
Speaker AThat's not what he's saying.
Speaker ABut what is he saying?
Speaker AHe says that if I'm guilty of the sin, I'm guilty before God because I would have to be perfect to have salvation in my own strength.
Speaker ASo I'm not teaching this, and the Bible's not teaching this that all sins have the same outcome here on this earth.
Speaker AHe's teaching that all sins have the same outcome when it comes to our guilt before God and salvation.
Speaker ASo some people might say, well, I haven't sinned that much.
Speaker AThat's the argument that some people have.
Speaker AMy good outweighs my bad.
Speaker APaul says, no, that.
Speaker AThat doesn't work.
Speaker AUltimately, what it means is that even if you've sinned a few times, you're still guilty before a holy God.
Speaker AAnd then Jesus, again, you have to remember what he said in Matthew, chapter five.
Speaker AHe took it further.
Speaker AOh, well, Pastor, I have.
Speaker AI've never done anything bad.
Speaker AOkay, well, the truth is that you're probably lying in that.
Speaker ABut at the end of the day, he says, it's more than just your actions.
Speaker AIt's also your attitude.
Speaker AJesus says, hey, don't.
Speaker AYou've heard, don't murder, but also don't hate your brother.
Speaker ABecause when you hate your brother, you committed murder in your heart.
Speaker AAnd so it's further than what we actually think.
Speaker AAnd so even if we convince everybody around us that we are good people, God knows our heart.
Speaker AAnd so sin is missing the mark.
Speaker AAnd in sin brings us all, all to a place of guilt before God.
Speaker AAnd that's what Paul is talking about here.
Speaker ASo when the person says, God has no right to judge because he's ultimately in control, what we can say is, yes, he has every right to judge.
Speaker AEvery one of us deserve the punishment of death.
Speaker AWe're going to get to Romans chapter 6.
Speaker AFor the wages or the payment of sin is death.
Speaker ANow, I know this isn't popular preaching.
Speaker AI. I know this isn't something that people turn on on a Saturday morning and get pumped up about.
Speaker AI'm a sinner and I deserve punishment.
Speaker ABut that's the truth.
Speaker ANow, there's going to be a good part to this in a minute, but I have to build the scene.
Speaker AWe have to see what Paul is talking about here.
Speaker AAnd so Paul was familiar with the line of thinking that, hey, God is in control of everything, so even if I do evil, he will be glorified.
Speaker ASo why don't I just keep doing evil?
Speaker ABecause he talks here specifically about the change, the transformation that needs to happen in a relationship with God, a need for faith in the one who fulfilled the law.
Speaker AA lot of people might believe or understand Jesus when he came that he said, hey, you know what?
Speaker AThe law is gone.
Speaker AI've destroyed the law.
Speaker AI've.
Speaker AYou don't even need the law.
Speaker AIt's gone, though.
Speaker AWe don't live by the letter of the law because none of us can.
Speaker AThe letter to the law shows us where we are guilty.
Speaker AIt's a school, master.
Speaker AIt teaches us that all of us need something bigger.
Speaker AAll of us need something holy to come into our lives and change us.
Speaker ASo what does the Bible say?
Speaker ASome of you already know this.
Speaker AYou guys know where I'm going with this.
Speaker AJesus did not come to destroy the law, but to fulfill the law.
Speaker AJesus, in his holiness here on this earth, fulfilled the law in every way so that when we trust in him, he is what the Bible's going to call here in a moment, propitiation.
Speaker ABecause he was the perfect sacrifice.
Speaker AAnd as God poured out his wrath and punishment upon Jesus, he took the weight of all of our sin.
Speaker AHe took all of that payment.
Speaker AAnd he said, you know what?
Speaker AI will take that because I am the only one who can take that.
Speaker AAnd so Paul says, worldly way of thinking, do what you want, it doesn't really matter.
Speaker AKind of like defeatism, determinism.
Speaker ABut at the end of the day, he says, that's worldly way of thinking.
Speaker AThat's not God's way of thinking.
Speaker AAnd so Paul, he basically dismisses the question.
Speaker AIf things were as what he says as the worldly way of thinking, God could judge nobody because he wouldn't have the right to.
Speaker ABut we all know that God has the right to because of what Scripture tells us here.
Speaker ASo, so Paul here is, is giving the certainty that the judgment day is coming.
Speaker AThere will be some that are justified in faith, and there will be some that are judged in sin, judged in rebellion.
Speaker ADoesn't matter if you're Jew or Gentile.
Speaker AIt's the matter of faith.
Speaker AAnd so what, what does Paul do?
Speaker APaul states the purpose to his, his argument here.
Speaker AYes, will God be glorified through, through my sin?
Speaker AYes, but it's never his will that we go that path.
Speaker AHow can God judge me?
Speaker AWell, Paul gets to that point there, Verse number nine.
Speaker AWhat then?
Speaker AAre we better than they?
Speaker ANo, in no wise.
Speaker AFor we have before proved both Jew and Gentile that they all are under sin.
Speaker APaul says, none of us, none of us can avoid it.
Speaker ATheir condemnation is just.
Speaker ASo what we can ultimately take from this section here is that there are some without the proper understanding of the brokenness and the punishment of sin that can twist the free gift of God's grace into a license for sin, into to a license of resting in our human sin and our human brokenness.
Speaker AAnd so it takes a beautiful, beautiful gift that is grace.
Speaker AAnd it twists it and perverts it and changes it to a place where basically says God's grace is actually wrong.
Speaker AFolks, the only reason that we have salvation at all is because of God's grace.
Speaker AAnd so lot of people say, well, you know what?
Speaker AIf God's so loving, why does he judge?
Speaker AGod is so loving because he offers us a way to not face judgment, because every single one of us deserve that.
Speaker AAnd so it's not a matter of God loving us less by judging us.
Speaker AIt's a matter of God loving us infinitely by offering us a way out.
Speaker AWe condemn ourselves by the sin that we commit in our own lives.
Speaker AAnd so what we can see here is that Paul addresses the pagan.
Speaker AThat's Romans chapter one.
Speaker AHe addresses the hypocrisy of the moral religious man in Romans chapter two.
Speaker AAnd he addresses the false confidence of the Jew in their own system of doing things, their own traditions here all the way through Romans chapter three.
Speaker AAnd essentially it culminates in verse nine.
Speaker AAnd we've already read it.
Speaker ABut what then?
Speaker AAre we better than they says?
Speaker AAre you better because you're a Jew?
Speaker AAre you better because you're a Gentile?
Speaker AAre you better because you go to church?
Speaker AOr are you better because you're an American?
Speaker AAre you better because you're a man?
Speaker AAre you better because you're a woman?
Speaker AHe says, really, at the end of the day, we all stand equal before the eyes of God.
Speaker AAre we either there in faith, are we there in anything else other than that faith in Jesus Christ?
Speaker AHe says, you're guilty.
Speaker ANone of us have an excuse, no in no wise.
Speaker AFor we have proved or demonstrated both Jew and Gentile, both churchgoer and non church goer, that they are all under sin.
Speaker ANow why are we so emphatic about this?
Speaker ABecause we have to warn against people who say, I'm good, I go to church, I'm good.
Speaker AI don't do those things that that person does.
Speaker AI, I'm good because I follow all the rules of my church.
Speaker AWe can see over and over and over again in the New Testament that it's not about being a list follower.
Speaker AIt's not about being part of some group or being part of some tradition.
Speaker AHe says ultimately it is through faith and faith alone.
Speaker AHe's going to build his case even more.
Speaker AHere in verse number 10, he says, as it is written.
Speaker ASo he references other passages of scripture.
Speaker AHe says, as it is written, there is none righteous.
Speaker ANo, not one.
Speaker AHe just used a really powerful phrase.
Speaker AIn verse nine, he says, all of us are under sin.
Speaker AThat word under sin literally means before we come to Christ in faith, we are all under bondage, we are all in chains.
Speaker AWe are all dictated by our sin.
Speaker ABut then we see here in verse 10, he says everyone is righteous.
Speaker ANo, not one.
Speaker AHe starts describing the sinfulness of man without God, a sinfulness with man without faith and having imputed righteousness of God in our life.
Speaker AHe says in verse number 11, there is none that understand it.
Speaker AThere is none that seeketh after God.
Speaker ANow before I go any further, this is a proof text to many people that say that you cannot be saved at all, you cannot do good at all without the understanding that God awakened you.
Speaker ANow what, what does this mean here?
Speaker AThis, this does not mean that, hey, you know what?
Speaker AI'm, I'm hopeless.
Speaker AOnly if God chooses me am I going to be saved.
Speaker ANo, this speaks to the description of someone who is in rebellion to God.
Speaker AAnd so ultimately what we can see here is that, hey, a lot of people will use this passage of scripture as there.
Speaker AYou can't even, you don't have a choice in being saved.
Speaker AYou don't have a choice at all.
Speaker ALike you.
Speaker AYou can never be saved outside of the fact that, hey, you're just forced to be saved.
Speaker AAnd some are forced to be saved and some are forced not to be saved.
Speaker AThat's the way that God ordains it.
Speaker ABut what we can see here is a description of who we are outside of faith in Jesus Christ.
Speaker AAnd then when the word of God we're going to see In Romans chapter 10, faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God.
Speaker AAs the word of God comes into our life and our hearts are awakened in the Holy Spirit and the Holy Spirit convicts us to the truth, we then have a decision to make whether or not we are going to believe in faith or we are going to reject in pride.
Speaker ASo he says, there is none that understandeth.
Speaker AThere is none that seeketh after God.
Speaker ASo what does that essentially mean?
Speaker AIn our flesh we don't seek after God, at least in the right way, in the biblical way.
Speaker AThey're, they're all gone out of the way.
Speaker AThey are together become unprofitable.
Speaker AThere is none that doeth good.
Speaker ANo, not one.
Speaker AAgain, he is referring to this action that people try to do by doing good in their own strength.
Speaker AAnd he says, you cannot do that.
Speaker AThese are all references to Old Testament scriptures.
Speaker AYou could look at Psalm 14, that's a cross reference.
Speaker APsalm 5, Psalm 140, Psalm 10, Psalm 36, and some passages even in Isaiah 59 speak to this opening statement that there is none righteous.
Speaker AThere is none that are good in and of their own selves.
Speaker AThen he goes on a little bit further.
Speaker AHe says verse 12.
Speaker AHe says, They've gone their own way.
Speaker AVerse 13.
Speaker ATheir throat is an open sepulcher.
Speaker AThey speak evil.
Speaker AOpen sepulcher.
Speaker AI don't know if you understand the, the picture there, but basically he's talking about like a dead person is in a tomb and the tomb is open.
Speaker ANow all of us understand that there's that stench of death.
Speaker AAnd so what he's saying this, he says, what we speak is evil.
Speaker AWhat we speak is terrible.
Speaker AWhat we speak is poisonous.
Speaker ATheir throat is an open sepulcher.
Speaker AWith their tongues they have used deceit.
Speaker AThey lie.
Speaker AThe poison of asp is under their lips.
Speaker AHe's talking about the venomous aspect of our speech.
Speaker AHow, you know, sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.
Speaker AThat's not biblical.
Speaker AWhat he says is that in our flesh we will hurt others with what we say, whose mouth is full of cursings and bitterness.
Speaker ATheir feet are swift to shed blood.
Speaker AThey're violent.
Speaker AThat's what he's saying here.
Speaker ADestruction and misery are in their ways.
Speaker AThis is all a description of who we are in humanity without Christ and the way of peace.
Speaker AHave they not known there is catch this because this is the culmination of all of it.
Speaker AThere is no fear of God before their eyes.
Speaker ASpeak of that here today.
Speaker AWhat are we talking about when we're talking about the fear of God?
Speaker AWell, it summarizes this entire thought and basically every sin, every rebellion against God is based in the fact that we don't have a proper respect for who he is and what he has done for us.
Speaker AWe believe in a lie.
Speaker AWe believe that our way is better.
Speaker AWe, we love ourselves more, we respect ourselves more.
Speaker AWe respect our, our flesh and its desires more than how we respect God.
Speaker ASo he says essentially, who are we without God?
Speaker AWe are ones that don't fear Him.
Speaker AWe are ones in sin.
Speaker AWe are ones who lie.
Speaker AWe are ones who shed blood.
Speaker AWe are ones who try to do it all in our own.
Speaker AAnd we see there in verse 12, it says that we become unprofitable or unfruitful in that there is no fear of God before their eyes.
Speaker AIt's all pride, it's all selfishness.
Speaker AFolks.
Speaker AWe all have to get to a point in our life where there is nothing that we fear more than God.
Speaker ANow by the way, when I say that word, fear, I'm not talking about trembling, thinking that God is going to condemn us because in faith we have no more condemnation.
Speaker AThat's Romans, chapter eight.
Speaker ABut what does it mean?
Speaker AIt means a healthy respect and understanding of the power of God and again, who he is and what he has done and how he views sin.
Speaker ASo I've been asked this question before as a believer.
Speaker AWell, can I just go sin?
Speaker ACan't, Can't I just go and just ask God for forgiveness?
Speaker ACan I just live the way that I want to live Monday through Saturday and do the worst stuff on Saturday night and then come back on Sunday morning and just say, lord forgive me?
Speaker AWell, the truth is, is that God's grace is abundant.
Speaker AGod will forgive you of your sin.
Speaker ABut if you fast forward just a little bit, Paul addresses this in Romans chapter six.
Speaker AWe're gonna, we're gonna get there and talk more about this later on.
Speaker ABut it says, what shall we say then?
Speaker AVerse 1?
Speaker AShall we continue in sin that grace may abound, God forbid.
Speaker AThere's another reference as Paul mentions God forbid.
Speaker AHow shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein?
Speaker ASo when you truly understand what God has done for you, that shouldn't be our heart.
Speaker AOur heart shouldn't be.
Speaker AWell, yeah, I can do whatever I want.
Speaker AGod will just forgive me.
Speaker AThat's called abuse of grace.
Speaker AAnd it's not having a proper Understanding of who God is and what he has done for us in our relationship with him.
Speaker AAnd so we go back to Romans, chapter three, and he says, that's who you are without God.
Speaker AYou are lacking the fear of God.
Speaker AYou are lacking righteousness.
Speaker AYou are lacking hope.
Speaker AYou are lacking fruitfulness.
Speaker AYou are lacking salvation.
Speaker AVerse 19.
Speaker ANow we know that what things soever the law saith, it saith to them who are under the law that every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God.
Speaker ASo here's what he's saying.
Speaker AHe's saying this lest you think that you can avoid God's judgment.
Speaker AIt says here that everyone, though we admit it or not, are under the law and that every mouth may be stopped.
Speaker AThink about someone just running their mouth.
Speaker ABut God, I have this.
Speaker AAnd they have all these excuses.
Speaker AEssentially what it says is that God eventually, in his judgment, will stop all of that.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause of his holiness.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd that all of the world may become guilty before God.
Speaker AWhat an interesting phrase that is.
Speaker AThe law cannot save us.
Speaker AThe law doesn't justify in any way.
Speaker AIt is useful, though.
Speaker AWe don't throw the law out.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker AIt's useful because it gives us the understanding of sin.
Speaker AIt gives us the understanding of the fact that we fall short.
Speaker AIt shows us how much more we need a savior.
Speaker AYou.
Speaker AYou think you're a good person?
Speaker AI'm a good person.
Speaker ALike, I, I, I'm.
Speaker AI'm.
Speaker AI. I've heard people say, you know what?
Speaker AI. I really believe that mostly everyone in this world are.
Speaker AThey're just really good people.
Speaker AWe're all just good people in.
Speaker AIn our hearts.
Speaker AI've even heard some preachers get up and say, for the most part, I think everyone in this world, we're.
Speaker AWe're all just good in our nature, folks.
Speaker AThat's the complete opposite of what the Bible just tells us.
Speaker AHere in Romans, chapter three.
Speaker AWe.
Speaker AWe are all.
Speaker AThough we can have flashes of goodness in our life, all of us are guilty before the law.
Speaker ASo lest you think you are a good person, unless I think I'm a good person, I'm gonna go ahead and pull out the Mosaic law.
Speaker AAnd I've got about 613 things you got to follow today.
Speaker ASome of you are like, I can follow maybe one, maybe two.
Speaker ABut hey, let's just even break it down to the 10.
Speaker A10 commandments, okay?
Speaker AIf we went through all those 10 commandments today, I think all of us would admit that we have fallen short at at least one of those.
Speaker AMost likely, almost all of them.
Speaker AOkay, so.
Speaker ASo the whole point is this, because a lot of times people in churches will teach this.
Speaker AJust be better people.
Speaker ABe more righteous.
Speaker AStart following the rules more.
Speaker ANo, what he's essentially saying is this.
Speaker AYou can't follow the rules.
Speaker AAll of us are guilty.
Speaker AWe need something bigger than our own works.
Speaker ASo verse 20, therefore, by the deeds of the law, there shall no flesh be justified.
Speaker ARemember that word, justified?
Speaker ADeclaration of righteousness.
Speaker AWe cannot declare ourselves righteous.
Speaker AWe cannot declare ourselves saved.
Speaker ATherefore, by the deeds of the law, there shall no flesh be justified in his sight, which his sight's the only one that matters in his sight.
Speaker AFor by the law is the knowledge of sin.
Speaker ASo you might think, what's the role of the law today for us?
Speaker AWell, we're not bound by the law.
Speaker AWe don't have to live by the law.
Speaker AWe're not saved by the law.
Speaker ABut the law shows us where we fall short.
Speaker AThe heart of God is this, even if we summarize it to this point.
Speaker ALove God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength.
Speaker ALove your neighbor as yourself.
Speaker AOn these two things hang all the law and the prophets, even that sometimes we fall short.
Speaker ASo some people think, well, I don't have to live by the law, but I'm just going to live by loving God with all my heart, and I'm love my neighbor as myself, and that's what's going to save me.
Speaker AThat's never what Jesus is saying.
Speaker AHe doesn't say, you're saved by that.
Speaker AHe says that you believe in faith and that's how it's manifested.
Speaker AAnd so what I would say is this, as a Christian, we have to understand that our flesh makes us incapable of saving ourselves.
Speaker AAnd so we get to verse number 21.
Speaker AIt says, but now.
Speaker ABut now the righteousness.
Speaker ASo, so you want righteousness.
Speaker ADon't earn it on your own.
Speaker AYou can't earn it on your own.
Speaker AIt's a.
Speaker AIt's a futile effort.
Speaker ABut he says you can't have righteousness.
Speaker AAnd so that's all the bad news, a lot of bad news.
Speaker AHere's the good news.
Speaker AAs a human, you can still find righteousness, but in.
Speaker ANot in your own righteousness, in the righteousness of God in your life.
Speaker AAnd so here we see in verse 21, but now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested.
Speaker AAnd so here's an interesting concept.
Speaker AThese words provide a wonderful transition from, hey, you're a sinner.
Speaker AHey, you failed to.
Speaker ANow you move from that judgment that we all deserve to the justification that we can find in Christ.
Speaker ABut now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested being witnessed by the law and the prophets.
Speaker AMeaning this faith has always been around.
Speaker AThis opportunity has always been around.
Speaker AFor those before Jesus Christ, it was looking for a messiah that is to come.
Speaker AIf you think that the people in the Old Testament were saved by the law, read the book of Hebrews, Specifically Hebrews, chapter 11.
Speaker AAbraham was saved by faith.
Speaker ANoah was saved by faith, always through faith.
Speaker AAnd so he says, you want to find that righteousness.
Speaker AThis type of righteousness has been found throughout all of history through the law and the prophets, verse 22.
Speaker AEven the righteousness of God, which is by faith in Jesus Christ, that, hey, that's it.
Speaker AThat's the call to action.
Speaker AThat's the good news.
Speaker AThat's the invitation.
Speaker AThat's the hope that we have.
Speaker AThat's the beauty of it, that it's not on me, it's on him and it's faith in him.
Speaker AAnd so what we can see here in verse 22 is this.
Speaker AYou want righteousness in your life.
Speaker AYou want the opposite of what's described in verses 10 through 19 and 20.
Speaker AYou say this, hey, it's not about me.
Speaker AIt's the righteousness of God which is found in not my good works, not my church I go to.
Speaker ABut it says there in verse 22, exactly word for word, what we do by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe, for there is no difference.
Speaker AEverybody is saved the same way.
Speaker AWell, Pastor, I'm going to come to church and I'm going to get cleaned up, and I'm going to look right, and I'm going to talk, right?
Speaker AAnd then I think I can get saved.
Speaker ANo, the Bible says that the person in the gutter addicted to drugs is saved the same way as the moral man who's living in a penthouse in New York City.
Speaker AEverybody is saved the same way.
Speaker AYou can't earn your way to heaven, you can't buy your way to heaven.
Speaker AAnd what we can see is that every other faith in this world outside of biblical Christianity says, you got to do something, you got to pay something.
Speaker AI was even having a conversation in our Bible study this morning.
Speaker AThere are certain, what we would call religions, I would call cults out there today that say you got to pay this much money to get to the next level, and then you can finally reach the level of complete wisdom when you pay enough to us.
Speaker ABut the Bible says there's nothing that we can pay.
Speaker AThere's nothing that we can do we are all saved the same way.
Speaker AThat's what we see in verse 22.
Speaker ASo many times we quote verse 23, for all have sinned and come short of the glory of God, and we leave it there.
Speaker AAnd there's a truth there.
Speaker ABut the complete truth is this.
Speaker AYes, we all have sinned.
Speaker AYes, all of us have fallen short of the glory of God.
Speaker ABut even the righteousness of God, which is by faith of Jesus Christ upon all them that believe.
Speaker AFor there is no difference, folks.
Speaker AThere's a remedy to the problem of sin.
Speaker AThere's a remedy to the point where we all fall short of the glory of God.
Speaker AYou know, what if we went to the Grand Canyon today and.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd we, like, we went as a church.
Speaker AI've never been to the Grand Canyon.
Speaker ASome of you have been there, so if I say something wrong, you just correct me later, okay?
Speaker ABut I'm pretty sure at most places in the Grand Canyon, I could not jump across, okay?
Speaker ASo I'm sitting there and I say, hey, guys, I think I can jump across there.
Speaker AAnd you guys are like, don't do that.
Speaker AHopefully you would say that.
Speaker AHopefully none of you are like, all right, go ahead.
Speaker ALet's see the pastor.
Speaker ABut.
Speaker ABut I run and I jump and I go maybe 20ft.
Speaker ABut guess what's going to happen?
Speaker AI'm going to fall to my demise.
Speaker AAnd then we have an Olympic long jumper come up there.
Speaker AHe comes up and he's wearing Olympic long jumper shirt.
Speaker AAnd we say, whoa, he's.
Speaker AThat's the gold medal Olympic long jumper.
Speaker AAnd he comes there.
Speaker AHe goes, hey, guys, I'm gonna jump across.
Speaker ASome people would say, well, I think that's still pretty far for an Olympic jumper to jump, but let's go ahead and see it.
Speaker AAnd he jumps and he goes three times farther than me.
Speaker ABut guess what?
Speaker AHe's still going to fall to his demise.
Speaker AThat's the futility of saying that.
Speaker AI'm better than that person.
Speaker AI've done more than that person.
Speaker AI'm more religious than that person.
Speaker AThe truth is, is that the VI can only be bridged through the cross.
Speaker AIt only can be, you know, walk.
Speaker AWalk across on the cross.
Speaker AAnd the idea that it's only through Jesus Christ that we can find that salvation.
Speaker AAnd so we Forget about verse 24.
Speaker AWe forget about verse 24 when we quote verse 23.
Speaker AFor all sin and come short of the glory of God.
Speaker AYes, but it says this.
Speaker ABeing justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.
Speaker AThe answer to verse 23 is verse 24.
Speaker AWe can be justified freely.
Speaker AIt's a free gift of grace to us through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.
Speaker AThat is the gospel.
Speaker ASome of you have heard the Romans road before.
Speaker AYou've heard of the.
Speaker AThe path to lead someone to Christ.
Speaker AAnd verse 23 is always on that path.
Speaker AI think that when we read verse 23, I think we should always read verse 24.
Speaker ABecause, yes, we do need to show people that they are in sin.
Speaker AWe do need to show people that they have fallen short.
Speaker AWe do need to show people that they need a Savior.
Speaker ABut then verse 24 tells us exactly how we can find that salvation through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus whom God has set forth to be.
Speaker AAnd here's this word that we were kind of alluding to for a while, the propitiation through faith in his blood.
Speaker AVerse 25 tells us how Jesus can do this.
Speaker AWe talked about why does.
Speaker AHow can God judge?
Speaker ABecause he's completely holy and we're completely sinful.
Speaker ABut then we see, how can Jesus save?
Speaker AHow.
Speaker AHow is Jesus sacrifice better than any other martyr in this world?
Speaker AWell, it says it right here.
Speaker AWhom God has set forth.
Speaker AIt's God's plan, God the Father's plan to be a propitiation or a satisfaction of God's wrath.
Speaker AHe's the perfect sacrifice is what it's saying here to be to declare his righteousness.
Speaker ANow, the way that he could do that propitiation is through his blood.
Speaker AHis blood.
Speaker AWe're going to celebrate that here in a few moments in communion.
Speaker ABut the fact is, is that his perfect blood is the satisfaction to our sin.
Speaker AWithout the shedding of blood, there's no remission and forgiveness of sins to declare his righteousness.
Speaker AFor the remission of sins that are passed through the forbearance of God, it is by the grace of God, it's through the forbearance of God that we are offered this opportunity through Jesus Christ to have salvation.
Speaker AIt's only through his perfect shed blood that we have this opportunity.
Speaker AAnd so we're going to finish to the end of the chapter.
Speaker AHere we go.
Speaker AThis is what we're going to do.
Speaker AWe're already this close.
Speaker AWe're going to go all the way to the end.
Speaker ASo then it says in verse 26 to declare, I say at this time, his righteousness.
Speaker AIt's his righteousness that he might be just and that the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus.
Speaker AWhere is boasting then?
Speaker AHow can we boast in this?
Speaker AWe can't boast in this.
Speaker AIt is excluded.
Speaker ABy what law or works?
Speaker ANay, no, but by the law of faith.
Speaker ASo what is he saying here?
Speaker AHe says, then how could anyone boast in their salvation?
Speaker AYou can't, because it's not something you did.
Speaker AIt's not some law you kept.
Speaker AIt's not by some action that we did.
Speaker AIt is only, only through faith in Jesus Christ.
Speaker AIs he the God of the Jews only?
Speaker AIs he not also of the Gentiles?
Speaker AYes, of the Gentiles also.
Speaker AFolks, what he's saying, this is this salvation is not just the one people.
Speaker AIt's not just for one culture.
Speaker AIt's for everybody seeing it is one God which shall justify the circumcision by faith and the uncircumcision through faith.
Speaker AJew, Gentile like are saved by faith, do we then make void the law?
Speaker ASo now he's going to ask a question.
Speaker AThis is going to be our transition for next week.
Speaker AHe says, okay, we have established Paul, Paul.
Speaker AI believe Paul believes here.
Speaker AAt this point, you all understand it's not by the law.
Speaker AOkay, by faith, verse 31.
Speaker ADo we then make void the law through faith?
Speaker AThen he uses his phrase here.
Speaker AGod forbid.
Speaker AYea, we established the law.
Speaker AAnd so next week we're going to look more into the idea of why do we still have the law?
Speaker AWhat's the role of the law today?
Speaker AHow can we as Christians reconcile the need for the law but also salvation by faith alone?
Speaker AAnd so we'll get to that next week.
Speaker ABut what I want us to see is this verse 30.
Speaker AIt summarizes his whole thinking here.
Speaker AAgain, there's a lot of summation verses, but verse 30 is another great summary verse, seeing it is one God which shall justify the circumcision, that's the Jewish by faith and the uncircumcision through faith.
Speaker ASalvation by faith alone, sola fide.
Speaker AThat's the Latin.
Speaker AAnd what we have to understand is, you say, pastor, you're preaching to a church that for the most part believes in faith completely.
Speaker AWhy does this matter?
Speaker ABecause salvation is isn't just a miracle of the moment.
Speaker AEven though justification is a transaction, it's a change in that moment.
Speaker ABut as a Christian, we can't just say, I'm saved today.
Speaker ANow I can live the life the way I want to live it.
Speaker AI can do what I want to do.
Speaker AThat goes back to what exactly Paul was talking about.
Speaker ASo what does this mean for us in theology?
Speaker AIt means this.
Speaker AWhen we are tempted to doubt God in his goodness, when we're tempted to think that we are better than we actually are in our own strength, when we're tempted to think that we can earn our way or do our own thing, when we're tempted to teach someone something outside of faith in Jesus Christ, we must go back to what the Bible says and rethink what's going on.
Speaker ABecause what does it say?
Speaker AGod is truth and man is a liar, and so we don't get our truth from man.
Speaker AI understand the beauty in democracy, but I also understand that the majority isn't always right.
Speaker AI've heard people make an argument to say, well, Pastor, most Christians believe that, so why don't you believe that?
Speaker AWell, what does the Bible say?
Speaker AWhat does the Bible say?
Speaker AWe're getting to a point in our house where we're outnumbered, right?
Speaker AWe've got three kids, and when Silas starts speaking, I guarantee you he's going to go with his siblings.
Speaker AAnd if he says, okay, we're going to have ice cream tonight, well, no, you're not.
Speaker AMike is like, yeah, we're having ice cream.
Speaker ADad, we already voted you out.
Speaker AThree, verse two.
Speaker AThat's not.
Speaker AIt's not how we do it in our house.
Speaker ADad has more than one vote.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker AThe truth is that sometimes we know in a silly fashion, sometimes within a smaller setting, we.
Speaker AThat the group can be wrong.
Speaker ABecause.
Speaker ABecause what.
Speaker AWhat if we said, hey, you know what?
Speaker AWhatever the.
Speaker AWhatever the mass majority says, we're going to go with.
Speaker AWell, many times the majority, the crowd is against scripture.
Speaker AWell, it makes a lot more sense to say that I can just be a good person and get to heaven.
Speaker AThat.
Speaker AThat.
Speaker AThat means.
Speaker AThat shows God's loving.
Speaker ANo, that's showing that you don't have a good grip on what the Bible says about the truth of salvation and salvation by faith alone.
Speaker AAnd so it's always going back to scripture and saying this, hey, you know what?
Speaker AEven though I'm tempted to drift and tempted to think a different way, why does God do that?
Speaker AWhy does God allow this?
Speaker AMaybe God isn't loving as I thought.
Speaker AWe have to go back and realign our thinking and say, no, God is completely loving.
Speaker AI must be wrong in the way that I'm doing these things.
Speaker ASo may we never abuse the grace of God.
Speaker AMay we never lack in the fear of the Lord, and may we get to a place in our life where we can celebrate the fact that it is not something that we do, but ultimately what he does through us in salvation and sanctification.
Speaker ABecause last point here, many of us will say, I Know, I'm not saved through my works, but I, I grow through my works.
Speaker AJust as you are saved by the grace of God, you grow in the understanding of who God is and you grow in your spiritual maturity through the grace of God as well.
Speaker AThat's why he says in the New Testament, grow in grace.
Speaker AIt's understanding that everything that we have in our life is through him and him alone.
Speaker AYeah, I can read my Bible more, but that doesn't equate to spiritual growth.
Speaker ASpiritual growth equates to me relying on God for everything in my life.
Speaker AThat's how I become more Christlike.
Speaker AThat's how I live out a Christlike life, is by relying on him to give me the strength and the wisdom and not in my own strength.
Speaker AAnd so for you today, that maybe have been saved for a long time, and maybe you're tempted to think that, yeah, I'm saved by faith, but I work my way to become a better Christian.
Speaker ANone of us, none of us can work our way to that place.
Speaker AIt's only through the grace of God and His presence in our life.
Speaker AWell, I'm going to ask if you're able to just stand with me.
Speaker AEvery head bowed, every eye closed.
Speaker AAs the music plays here this morning, we're going to have a time of invitation.
Speaker AI know that today was heavier on the theology, heavier on the logic.
Speaker ABut folks, if Paul thought this to be so important to preach, all the more reason why we need to preach it today.
Speaker ASo many people are getting their eyes off of what the Bible says about God and putting their eyes on the things that the world says about God.
Speaker AThe world as we saw already.
Speaker AWhat does it say?
Speaker AThe that man is a liar.
Speaker AGod is the truth.
Speaker AWho are we going to go to to have our definition of how God works?
Speaker AWhat God does, who he is?
Speaker AAre we going to go to the world?
Speaker AAre we going to go to our own definitions?
Speaker AAre we going to go to what culture says about God?
Speaker AAre we going to say, no, that's a liar?
Speaker AThe only one who's telling me the truth is God.
Speaker AAnd I'm only going to find what I believe through His Word.
Speaker ABecause what you believe matters.
Speaker ABecause what you believe will be translated to how we act.
Speaker AFolks, if you want to live a godly life, you got to think Christ like things.
Speaker AYou got to think what the Word of God says in your life.
Speaker AMeditate upon the truth of God.
Speaker AFolks, I am tempted every day to doubt what the Word of God says in my flesh and in the world's system.
Speaker ABut what we must do is die to our flesh, die to the world and say, it is through Jesus Christ that I have life and therefore I'm never going to doubt Him.
Speaker AHis word is true.
Speaker AHis word is a sword.
Speaker AIt is alive.
Speaker AIt is profitable for doctrine, for approved, for correction, for instruction and righteousness.
Speaker ASo here this morning, may we be aligned to his truth and not our own.
Speaker AMay we be aligned to his truth and and not the world's.
Speaker AI ask you this morning, think about what we've talked about today, the doctrine of sin, the need for a Savior, and the perfection of the gift of Jesus Christ.
Speaker ALord, I pray that you be in this time of invitation, working hearts and lives today.
Speaker ALord, help us to get to a place in our lives where we are relying on you and you alone for our growth, for our salvation, for our patience, for our peace, for our comfort.
Speaker ALord, help us not to believe the lies of this world.
Speaker AHelp us not to buy into man's logic.
Speaker AHelp us to follow your economy, help us to follow your purpose and your plan for our lives.
Speaker ALord, I pray that you'd be in this time of invitation, working hearts and life.
Speaker ASo if there's someone here today who does not know you as personal Savior, may today be the day of that salvation.
Speaker AJesus name Amen.
Speaker AAs the music plays, some have already come Follow as the Lord leads.
Speaker AHere this morning it thank you again for listening to the Middletown Baptist Church podcast.
Speaker AI hope that this sermon has been a blessing for you.
Speaker AIf you 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.
Speaker AJoin Josh Massaro@middletownbaptistchurch.com if you've enjoyed this podcast.
Speaker APlease subscribe and follow along for future podcast and updates.
Speaker AThank you so much.
Speaker AGod Bless.
Speaker AHave a wonderful day.