Renew: Romans 8 With Timothy KellerSýnishorn
In Order That…
Romans 8, one of the best-loved chapters in the whole of Scripture…
- What does 8 v 1 tell us about being “in Christ”? Why is this wonderful news?
- What else has happened to Christians (v 2)?
The phrase Paul uses in verse 1 is much stronger than simply saying we are not condemned; it is that there is no condemnation at all—no possibility of it. Not only are we not condemned, we can never and will never be condemned.
- How does this affect our response to sin?
- How does this affect our view of our future?
In chapter 7, Paul showed us that Christians still wrestle with remaining, indwelling sin—“what I hate I do” (7 v 15). Yet at the same time, Christians now experience a real disgust over sin—“what I hate I do.”
But there is more to say. Although they sin, for those who are “in Christ Jesus” there “is now no condemnation”—first, not because of their own obedience (chapter 7 has shown that no Christian obeys as they should), but because of the work of God’s Son and God’s Spirit (8 v 2). And secondly, because the Spirit now works to do what we cannot—overcome sin. The work of the Spirit is what chapter 8 is about.
- How did God free us from death (v 3)?
In his Son, God has defeated the legal penalty of sin—death. But this is not all: through his Son’s work, God now sends the Spirit to his people, to wipe out sin in our lives. “The righteous requirement of the law” can now “be fully met in us” (v 4). How can this be? It is because we “do not live according to the sinful nature but according to the Spirit.”
Verse 4 is telling us that everything Christ did for us—his incarnation, life, death and resurrection—was “in order that” we would live a holy life. Jesus’ whole purpose was to make us holy, and able to live holy lives.
This is the greatest possible motive for living a holy life. Whenever we sin, we are endeavoring to frustrate the aim and purpose of the entire ministry of Christ Jesus. If this doesn’t work as an incentive for living a holy life, nothing will.
- In what part of your life do you need to let this truth change you today?
Ritningin
About this Plan
“Perhaps the most wonderful part of the book of Romans for me is in Romans chapter 8, where it summarizes how you change from the inside out—how you change deeply.” Spend five days walking through this majestic passage of Scripture with Timothy Keller and discover the perspective that transforms everything. This plan is taken from Explore Bible devotional.
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