Because He Livesنموونە
Declared with Power to Be the Son of God
In the introduction to his letter to the Romans, Paul laid out his mission and the authority by which he accomplished it. We often skim through his words until we get to the “I am not ashamed of the gospel” part at the end, but to understand why he was not ashamed of the gospel opens up the entire letter to us.
Yes, Paul tells us in Verses 16 and 17 that the gospel is the power of God for salvation and that there is a particular kind of righteousness contained within it. These reasons are important, but by themselves they don’t explain the authority he and we have to claim them.
Look at Verses 3 and 4 - “… regarding his Son, who as to his [flesh] was a descendant of David, and who through the Spirit of holiness was declared with power to be the Son of God by his resurrection from the dead: Jesus Christ our Lord.”
There were plenty of reasons to believe that Jesus the man was a descendant of David. Paul never had a reason to doubt Jesus belonged to the tribe of Judah.
However, even with that understanding, Paul was the original skeptic regarding the idea of the risen Jesus.
But when he met Jesus on the road to Damascus, Paul could not deny what happened to him, and everything changed. He became history’s strongest proclaimer of Jesus’ resurrection.
Look at that second statement again - “who through the Spirit of holiness was declared with power to be the Son of God by his resurrection from the dead.”
When this truth hit home, Paul had his meaning and purpose, his reason for being. This gives you and me meaning and purpose as well.
Why is the gospel “the power of God for salvation”? Why is “a righteousness from God revealed” in it? There is only one possible answer to these questions. Jesus is alive!
Jesus was raised completely victorious over sin and death. Jesus is the gospel.
In the introduction to his letter to the Romans, Paul laid out his mission and the authority by which he accomplished it. We often skim through his words until we get to the “I am not ashamed of the gospel” part at the end, but to understand why he was not ashamed of the gospel opens up the entire letter to us.
Yes, Paul tells us in Verses 16 and 17 that the gospel is the power of God for salvation and that there is a particular kind of righteousness contained within it. These reasons are important, but by themselves they don’t explain the authority he and we have to claim them.
Look at Verses 3 and 4 - “… regarding his Son, who as to his [flesh] was a descendant of David, and who through the Spirit of holiness was declared with power to be the Son of God by his resurrection from the dead: Jesus Christ our Lord.”
There were plenty of reasons to believe that Jesus the man was a descendant of David. Paul never had a reason to doubt Jesus belonged to the tribe of Judah.
However, even with that understanding, Paul was the original skeptic regarding the idea of the risen Jesus.
But when he met Jesus on the road to Damascus, Paul could not deny what happened to him, and everything changed. He became history’s strongest proclaimer of Jesus’ resurrection.
Look at that second statement again - “who through the Spirit of holiness was declared with power to be the Son of God by his resurrection from the dead.”
When this truth hit home, Paul had his meaning and purpose, his reason for being. This gives you and me meaning and purpose as well.
Why is the gospel “the power of God for salvation”? Why is “a righteousness from God revealed” in it? There is only one possible answer to these questions. Jesus is alive!
Jesus was raised completely victorious over sin and death. Jesus is the gospel.
Scripture
About this Plan
All of Christianity rests on this one single truth – Jesus Christ was raised from the dead. Because He lives, you can count yourself fully alive to God, no longer mastered by sin, but living through the power of grace.
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