The Bible with Nicky and Pippa Gumbel, Classic Version, 2020Sample
The Way Out of the Maze
At the age of eighteen, Billy Nolan ran away from the merchant navy. He was an alcoholic for thirty-five years. For twenty years he sat outside HTB drinking alcohol and begging for money. On 13 May 1990, he looked in the mirror and said, ‘You’re not the Billy Nolan I once knew.’ To use his own expression, he asked the Lord Jesus Christ into his life and made a covenant with Him that he would never drink alcohol again. From that day on, he didn’t touch a drop. His life was transformed; he radiated the love and joy of Christ. I once said to him, ‘Billy, you look happy.’ He replied, ‘I am happy because I am free. Life is like a maze and at last I have found the way out through Jesus Christ.’
St Augustine wrote that God was the master ‘whom to serve is perfect freedom’. This is a great paradox. Many people think that if they serve God they will lose their freedom. In fact, it is the very opposite. Living for ourselves is, in fact, a form of slavery. Serving God ‘in the new way of the Spirit’ (Romans 7:6) is the way to find perfect freedom – free to have a relationship with Him and to be the kind of person that deep down you long to be.
Psalm 88:1-9a
Cry out to God
This Psalm describes a situation similar to the one that Billy Nolan had found himself in: ‘I’m caught in a maze and can’t find my way out, blinded by tears of pain and frustration’ (v.8, MSG).
The psalmist is undergoing great suffering. His ‘soul is full of trouble’ (v.3a). He thinks he is going to die: ‘I’m camped on the edge of hell... a hopeless case. Abandoned as already dead’ (vv.3–5, MSG). He is ‘in the darkest depths’ (v.6), ‘without strength’ (v.4), ‘confined and cannot escape’ (v.8). He has even lost the support of his closest friends (v.8).
Only God can save us: ‘God, you’re my last chance of the day’ (v.1, MSG). However bad your situation may feel, cry out to God for freedom.
‘O Lord, the God who saves me, day and night I cry out before you. May my prayer come before you; turn your ear to my cry’ (vv.1–2).
Romans 6:15-7:6
Serve God
There is a Thomas the Tank Engine cartoon that pictures Thomas on his side, having fallen off the train tracks. He is shouting, ‘I’m free! I’m free at last. I’ve fallen off the rails and I’m free!’ Of course, the reality is that Thomas is far more ‘free’ when his wheels are on the rails and he is operating in line with how he has been created to function.
It is the same with us. We might imagine that we are freer if we have no one telling us what to do other than ourselves, but this is a delusion for we find ourselves enslaved to sin – it leads to ‘a dead end’ (6:21, MSG).
It has been said that ‘the only exercise some people take is jumping to wrong conclusions.’ The apostle Paul is worried that his readers will jump to the wrong conclusion – that some might argue that it doesn’t matter if we carry on sinning. He writes, ‘What then? Shall we sin because we are not under law but under grace? By no means!’ (v.15).
The assurance of forgiveness is not an excuse to continue sinning. Grace is not a casual ‘get out clause’ for sin. It would be absurd to carry on sinning for two reasons:
- New Lord
As a Christian you have a new Lord. You now serve God, ‘one whose commands set you free to live openly in his freedom!’ (v.17, MSG). Like it or not, we are all slaves to something. Sin is a form of slavery which brings only spiritual captivity and death, but serving God brings perfect freedom. For ‘God’s gift is real life, eternal life, delivered by Jesus, our Master’ (v.23, MSG).
God is your new Lord. Every time you yield to sin you are going against the purpose of grace – which is to give you real life, eternal life. When you are tempted, remember that you do not have to give in. You are no longer a slave to sin. You are free to say ‘no’.
Remember also the rewards of obedience. In serving God, ‘the benefit you reap leads to holiness, and the result is eternal life’ (v.22). - New love
It is absurd to carry on sinning because, as well as having a new Lord, you also have a new love.
Paul speaks about one aspect of marriage to illustrate this. A woman is released from the law of marriage when her husband dies. Death discharges us from the law (7:1–6).
Similarly, we as Christians have died to the law. Our old love was the law but, as Christians, ‘we’re no longer shackled to that domineering mate of sin’ (v.6, MSG). You can now be bound to your new love, Jesus, just as a woman whose husband dies is free to marry a new love (v.4).
Now that you live under grace rather than under law, you have the Spirit living in you who fills you with both the desire and ability to do what is right. Connected to your new love, Jesus, you ‘serve in the new way of the Spirit, and not in the old way of the written code’ (v.6). Jesus sets you free to be the person that, deep down, you long to be. This is true freedom.
Lord, thank You that serving You is perfect freedom. Today I offer all the parts of my body as slaves to righteousness (6:19). I want to serve You, my Lord and my love, in the way of the Spirit.
Hosea 3:1-5:15
Seek God’s freedom
Some people find ‘sin’ a hard concept, but ‘loving something too much’ (idolatry) is something most of us can understand. Our highest love is that which we serve and worship.
This Old Testament passage provides an illustration of the principle that Paul expounded in the book of Romans, that those who sin are slaves to sin and end up with their lives caught in a maze.
God loves His people (3:1). The prophet Hosea is called to give a visual aid of this by his love for his wife in spite of the fact that she has committed adultery (v.1): ‘Love her the way I, God, love the Israelite people, even as they flirt and party with every god that takes their fancy’ (v.1, MSG).
Hosea speaks the word of the Lord, ‘There is no faithfulness, no love, no acknowledgement of God in the land. There is only cursing, lying and murder, stealing and adultery’ (4:1–2). The people are guilty of adultery and prostitution (vv.13b,15; 5:3). This is a fairly accurate description of many societies today.
The leaders were not setting a good example: ‘The more the priests increased, the more they sinned against me; they exchanged their Glory for something disgraceful. They feed on the sins of my people and relish their wickedness. And it will be: Like people, like priests’ (4:7–9).
Instead of finding freedom through their sin, they were dissatisfied and enslaved as a result of their sin: ‘They’ll eat and be as hungry as ever, have sex and get no satisfaction... Wine and whiskey leave my people in a stupor... Drunk on sex, they can’t find their way home. They’ve replaced their God with their genitals’ (vv.10–12, MSG). They are ‘addicted to idols... When the beer runs out, it’s sex, sex, and more sex’ (vv.17–18, MSG).
They found themselves unable to turn back to God: ‘Their deeds do not permit them to return to their God’ (5:4a). Adultery and prostitution were rife among the people (14:13b,15; 5:3). It is as if they had come under some demonic power: ‘A spirit of prostitution is in their heart; they do not acknowledge the Lord’ (v.4b). He withdrew Himself from them (v.6).
But God’s withdrawal was so that the people would come back to Him. The way back is to admit their guilt and seek God’s face: ‘In their misery they will earnestly seek me’ (v.15b).
‘Exactly how do we seek God?’ writes Joyce Meyer. ‘One way is to think about Him and consider what matters to Him and what He says about certain situations. When we seek Him, we find out much more about His answers to our problems. We also find joy, peace, love, wisdom and everything else we need in our lives. Let me urge you to seek Him in every area of your life today.’
Lord I seek You today. I bring to You all the problems that I’m facing… Please show me what You want me to do. Give me wisdom. Help me today to find perfect freedom in serving You wholeheartedly.
Pippa Adds
Romans 6:23b
‘… but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.’
I find buying presents for people rather stressful. I am often overwhelmed by people’s kindness, generosity and thoughtfulness when I am given a present. God’s gift to us is even more amazing – ETERNAL LIFE! This gift will never get old, worn out or forgotten. It is the most precious gift of all. It required a huge sacrifice in getting it; it will last forever and be perfect in every way.
Verse of the Day
‘God’s gift is real life, eternal life, delivered by Jesus’ (Romans 6:23, MSG).
References
Nicky Gumbel, Questions of Life (Alpha International, 2011) p.47.
Joyce Meyer, The Everyday Life Bible (Faithwords, 2018) p.1368.
Unless otherwise stated, Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version Anglicised, Copyright © 1979, 1984, 2011 Biblica, formerly International Bible Society. Used by permission of Hodder & Stoughton Publishers, an Hachette UK company. All rights reserved. ‘NIV’ is a registered trademark of Biblica. UK trademark number 1448790.
Scripture marked (MSG) taken from The Message. Copyright © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002. Used by permission of NavPress Publishing Group.
About this Plan
This plan takes readers through the entirety of Scripture in one year. Combined with a daily commentary from Nicky and Pippa Gumbel, this plan guides us to engage more closely with God’s Word and encourages us not only to apply the teachings of Scripture to our everyday life, but also to move deeper in our relationship with Jesus.
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We are grateful to Nicky and Pippa Gumbel for sharing this plan. Nicky Gumbel is vicar of Holy Trinity Brompton in London, and the pioneer of Alpha. Check it out here: https://alpha.org/