Thru the Bible—RomansSýnishorn
What Makes Salvation Great
You are about to spend time in one of the most important books of the Bible. For millions in every generation, God uses this book of Romans to change thinking, deepen faith, and comfort hearts. Before you dive in, ask Him to quiet your heart and awaken your mind to the greatest subject of the ages: His great salvation.
Every Christian should make every effort to know Romans, for this book will ground your faith. It contains God’s great gospel manifesto, but we must begin by seeing mankind on our own as ruined creatures without God, helpless and hopelessly lost. The only remedy for our sin is the perfect remedy God provides in Jesus Christ for lost humanity.
This is the great message of Romans: God takes lost sinners—like us—and He brings us into the family of God and makes us His children. He does it not because we deserve it but because Christ died on the cross.
The gospel of Christ, the apostle Paul says, is the power of God to save everyone who believes. You can’t work for or buy this righteousness from God; you only can accept it by faith. Justification by faith means the subtraction of sin and the addition of righteousness—all so you might stand before God complete in Christ. God saves on no other ground than that you trust Jesus.
God uses many ways to communicate with us in His Word. First, He gave history, poetry, prophecy, and the Gospels, and now we come to a new section: The Epistles. The Lord speaks to us in these wonderful letters, whose primary purpose was to carry the gospel along Roman roads to the world.
This message is God’s good news. Man didn’t create it; it existed way before us. God promised it all through the Old Testament. The message is this: God loves mankind and has made a way to save mankind. The gospel is “concerning” Jesus Christ and what He has done. “Concerning” is the Greek preposition peri—also used in “periscope” and “perimeter”—and means “that which encircles.” Draw a wide circle around Jesus, and the gospel is what goes inside.
We are introduced to Jesus here by His full title: He is the Son of God, and He is Jesus Christ our Lord. In His humanity, Jesus is the seed of David. He is virgin-born because He is the Son of God with power. He is the risen One—when Jesus rose from the dead, it proved everything. The Resurrection didn’t make Him the Son of God, it simply revealed that He was. He is perfect humanity and deity—not any more man because He is God, and not any less God because He is man. He is God-man.
Jesus’ resurrection ensures He will someday return to this earth as the Judge and the King of kings and Lord of lords. He will put down sin, reigning on this earth in righteousness.
As Paul and the other apostles crisscrossed the colossal empire sharing the gospel, hundreds of thousands of people came to faith in Jesus Christ, believing God loved the world so much that He gave His Son to die that whoever believed on Jesus Christ will not perish, but have eternal life (see John 3:16).
As he did in every letter, Paul begins the book by wishing us God’s grace and peace (v. 7)—grace (charis), the Gentile’s greeting, and peace (shalom), the Jewish greeting. Paul extends his double blessing to everyone who will read this and then begins to teach.
Next: Your two options to know more about God.
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About this Plan
Romans lays down the foundation for our faith. Salvation is a gift received through faith alone in God. We are dead to sin and forever alive in Christ by His grace. In 15 summaries, discover how this letter follows the road to salvation, from death to life. Our teacher Dr. J. Vernon McGee said, “It’s just as if it came by special delivery mail to us today.”
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